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A33636 An exact abridgement in English of the eleven books of reports of the learned Sir Edward Coke, knight, late lord chief justice of England and of the councel of estate to His Majestie King James wherein is briefly contained the very substance and marrow of all those reports together with the resolutions on every case : also a perfect table for the finding of the names of all those cases and the principall matters therein contained / composed by Sir Thomas Ireland. Coke, Edward, Sir, 1552-1634.; Ireland, Thomas, Sir. 1650 (1650) Wing C4919; ESTC R26030 276,990 515

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fine be reversed by nonage of the wife all the estate shall be restored to the wife presently for all the estate passed from her by the fine and so it was adjudged Banco regis in Worseleys case Resolved that though the variance of the limitation be onely in one estate and they agree in all the other yet all is voyd But if two joynt tenants or two having severall estates vary 't is good for every of their parts and shall be directed by their interests but if the variance had been in limitation of part of the land and they had agreed in the use it should be voyd for that part and good for the residue Note That though the husband might dispose of the land during coverture yet for the cause aforesaid his declaration was voyd If A. tenant for life and B. in reversion or remainder both levie a fine together generally the use shall be to A. for life the reversion or remainder to B. in fee for either of them grants that which lawfully he may grant and either of them shall have the use which the Law vesteth in them according to the estate which they would convey over Winningtons case 40. of the Queene fo 59. W. Infeoffed B. upon condition to regive to the Feoffor for life the remainder to J. Sonne and heire of the Feoffor the Feoffor enters and takes the profits without agreement or contradiction of the Feoffee and leases to D for 21. yeares and yet continues possession the Feoffee acknowledges a Statute to J. the Feoffor makes a feoffement to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to his second Sonne in taile c. and dyes the Feoffee enters and infeoffes the Sonne and heire upon which the second Sonne enters c. Resolved that though the intention was that the Feoffee should make an estate to him for his life when he hath entered without agreement of the Feoffee 't is a disseisin and the rather because as owner of the land he tooke upon him to make a Lease for yeares Resolved that by the Lease by Indenture he hath dispensed with the condition during the terme Resolved that when the Feoffor disseises the Feoffee upon condition and the Feoffee acknowledges a Statute c. This is no disability to cause the Feoffor to enter for the right of the Feoffee is not subject to the Statute but when the Feoffee in possession takes a wife grants a rent or acknowledges a Statute the land is presently subject c. And though upon entry he may be disabled yet till then he is not because the wife may dye or the Statute be released and then he may enter and performe the condition and the Feoffor by his feoffement hath extinct the condition so that the Feoffee may enter and when he hath infeoffed the eldest Sonne he hath done well Westcots Case in Communi Banco 41. El. fo 60. IF a man make an estate to three and to the heires of one of them one of them in this case hath Fee simple and yet the joynt estate continues for it is all one estate created at one time and therefore the Fee simple cannot drowne the joynture which taketh effect with creation of the remainder in fee but when three joyntenants are for life and after one of them purchase the Fee or else the Fee discends to him there the Fee simple doth drowne the estate for life for the estate for life was in esse before Note by this resolution if tenant for life grant his estate to him in the reversion and a stranger 't is a surrender for the moity and the benefit of survivor not regarded so the doubt in 7. H. 6. well resolved Resolved upon view of three presidents that judgement should be given for the plaintiffe upon a demise made by husband and wife without alledging it to be by Deed. Tookers Case 43. Eliz. fo 66. IOhn Arundell seised of Lands in Fee maketh a Lease thereof to A. and B. for their lives and after grants the reversion to C. for his life to which grant A. doth atturne being joynt tenant with B. and after A. by his Deed doth surrender to C. all his estate title and interest c. and then dyeth C. entereth claiming to hold in common with B. and whether his entree was lawfull or no was the question and judgement was given that it was lawfull for the attornement of the one tenant for life shall vest the entire reversion in the grantee because the estate of the joynt Lessees is entire and every joynt tenant is seised per my pro tout ' and by consequence the reversion which is dependent and expectant upon this estate is entire also and the atturnement of the one joyntenant is the atturnement of both Attournement is a lawfull act if one joyntenant assigne Dower 't is good Also the attornement passes no interest from him that attournes but perfects the grant of another And if one joyntenant give seisure of rent that shall binde the other but in a quid juris clamat or quem redditum reddit or per quae servitia one joyntenant shall not be permitted to attourne without his companion for doing of prejudice to his companion By Popham one joynt-tenant may prejudice another in the personalty but not in the realty if one take all the profits or release a personall action the other hath no remedy because of the privity and trust betweene them and the folly imputed to him to joyne with such a companion Note if a tenant have notice of the grant by a stranger and doe give his assent thereunto it is a good atturnement although it be in the absence of the grantee but disagreement ought to be to the party himselfe or doe atturne for any part it is good for the whole for the intent of an atturnement is but onely an assent to perfect the grant of another and he which atturnes cannot apportion divide or alter the grant Lord Cromwells case 40. of the Queene fo 70. BLunt bargained c. the Mannor of Alexton to which the Advowson of A. was appendant by Indenture to have as after in the same Indenture is mentioned and B. covenanted to suffer a common Recovery to the use of Andrewes and his heires rendring 42. pounds per annum to B. and his heires with a nomine poenae And further 't was covenanted and agreed as well for the assurance of the Mannor to A. as of the rent to B. that B. should levie a Fine c. to A. and his heires and A. by the same Fine should render a rent of 42. pounds per annum c Provided alwayes that A. by Deed should give the Advowson c. to B. during his life and if it did not become voyd during his life one turne to his executors c. And further 't was covenanted and agreed that all assurances afterwards to be made should be to the use of this Indenture c. after a recovery was
a grant but the common Law requires that he be so instructed that he be not deceived there a Non obstante supplies it and makes the grant good As the King having made a lease for life or yeares grants the land Non obstante that it be in lease for life yeares c. or if he grants the land and further grants the reversion of it depending upon an estate for life yeares c. 't is good See the booke at large Resolved when the words are not sufficient ex vi termini to passe the thing granted but the grant is voyd there a Non obstante will not serve as in the principall case and the Pattents were not holpen by 18. of the Queene ca ' 2. for Pattents of concealement are expressely excepted out of the Act. Terringhams case 27. El. in banco regis fo 36. REsolved that prescription doth not make a thing appendant except the thing which is appendant agree in quality and nature to the thing unto which it should be appendant as a thing incorporate as an advowson to a thing corporate as a Mannor or as a thing corporate as Lands to a thing incorporate as an office these may be appendant but every thing incorporate may not be appendant to a thing corporate as common of turbary may not be appendant to Land but to a Messuage or house as it is holden 5. ass 9. for the thing which is appendant ought to accord with the nature and quality of the thing to which it is appendant and turves ought to be expended in a Messuage The commencement of common appendant by the ancient Law was in this manner viz. When a Lord of a Mannor infeoffed another of arrable Lands to hould of him in Soccage id est per servicium socae the Feoffee ad maintenand ' servicium socae had common in the wasts of the Lord for his necessary beasts that did plowe and ayre his Lands and this common is of common right and commenceth by operation of the Law and in favour of tillage and therefore it needeth not to prescribe in that for so it is houlden 4. H. 6. 22. H. 6. as one ought if it were against common right But it is onely appendant to the ancient arrable Lands and onely for oxen horses kyne and sheepe c. And because it is against the nature of common appendant to be appendant to meadowe or pasture and because that here the prescription was to have common time out of minde to a house meadow and pasture as well as to arrable by which it appeares to the Court that there hath been a house meadow and pasture time out of minde 't was resolved that this common was appurtenant not appendant But if of latter times men have builded upon some part of such arrable Lands and some part thereof is imployed to meadow and pasture and this for maintenance of tillage the originall cause of common the common remaines appendant and it shall be intended in respect of the continuall usage of the common for beasts leavant and couchant upon such lands that at the beginning all was arrable But in pleading he ought to prescribe that the same is appendant to Land for though terra dicitur a terrendo quia vomere territur yet terra includes all and is arrable though converted to meadow c. For it may be plowed A man may prescribe to have common appendant to his Mannor for all the demeanes shall be intended arrable at least in construction of Law redd ' singula singulis it shall be appendant to such demeanes which are ancient arrable c. And when a man claimes common appendant to his Mannor no incongruity appeares of his own shewing as here So common may be appendant to a Carve of land which may containe pasture meadow and wood but it shall be applyed to that which agrees with the nature of the common Resolved that common appendant may be apportioned because 't is of common right for if a commoner purchase part of the Lands in which he hath common yet the common shall be apportioned as well as if the Lord purchase parcell of the tenancy the rent shall be apportioned And if A. a commoner enfeoffe B. of parcell of his ancient Lands the common shall be apportioned and B. shall have common pro rata And 't was agreed that such common which is admeasurable remaines after severance of part of the land to which c. But here for that the common was appurtenant 't was adjudged that by the purchase all was extinct for 't was against common right for by the act of the parties it cannot be in esse for part and extinct for part 'T was said that pertinens is the Latine word as well for appurtenant as appendant and therefore subjecta materia and the circumstances ought to direct the Court to adjudge the common appurtenant or appendant Resolved that unity of possession of the intire land to which c and of the intire land in which c. extinguishes the common appendant By Wray chiefe Justice common for vicinage is not appendant but for that it ought to be by prescription 't is resembled to common appendant but common appurtenant or in grosse may commence at this day by grant or prescription and by him the one may inclose common for vicinage against the other as hath been adjudged in Smith and Redmans case Resolved that a man may chase out beasts that doe him trespasse with a small dog and shall not be compelled to distraine them damage feasant Cases of Appeales and Indictments Brookes case 28. of the Queene fo 39. REsolved that in an appeale of Burglary 't was an insufficient count that the defendant domum c. fel●… burgaliter fregit for it ought to be burgla●… or burgulariter which is vox artis as murdravit ●…it which cannot be otherwise expressed Resolved if the count had been sufficient he being ●…icted once should not be againe impeached but here he was discharged upon the insufficient count By Wray Chiefe Justice if upon accident a man and all his family are out of the house and one in the interim breakes the house and commits felony 't is burglary for the indictment is domum mansionalem fregit and so 't was resolved 38. of the Queene where a man hath two mansion houses servants in both and in the night when the servants are out c. the house is broken 't is burglary Wetherell and Darlys case 35. of the Queene fo 40. IN an appeale of murder the Defendant was found guilty of homicide and had his Clergy after indicted and arraigned for murther pleaded this conviction Resolved that 't is a good barre at common Law and restrained by no Statute the reason is because the life of a man shall not be brought twice in question for the same offence Youngs case 38. of the Queene fo 40. AN Indictment that dedit unam plagam mortalem circiter pectus
make a Lease for yeares and after enter into the Land and make wast and the Lessor recover in an Action of wast against the Lessee for life he shall avoid the Lease for yeares made before the wast committed But if a Lessee for life make a Lease for yeares and after enter and make a feoffement in fee the Lessor shall not avoid the Lease for yeares and so if a Tenant make a Lease for yeares and after is attainted of felony or dyeth without heire the Lord by escheate shall not avoide the tearme But because the feoffement in the case at barre was executed by Letter of Attourney it was resolved to be void and the Land escheated to the Queene Jehu Webbes Case 6. Jacobi com banco fo 45. THe King grants the office of the Kings Tennis plaies at W. to one who being disseised brings an assize The Patent shall have a reasonable construction not onely when the King himselfe playes but when any of his Houshould As if a Commission be made to take Singing-Boys in a Cathedrall-Church for the Kings Chappell those that Sing there for their pleasure cannot be taken but such as get their living by it There were but two manner of assizes at the common Law assizes De libero tenemento and De communia pasturae but for no other common but for this onely there is a Writ in the Register But the Statute of W. 2. c. 25. giveth it De proficuo in certo loco capiendo in lieu of a Quod permittat and although that there offices amongst other things are named yet an assize lay of an office at the common Law and although that no Tenant for life may have a Quod permittat yet an assize did lye for him but that is to be understood of an office of profit for it lyeth not of an office of charge Originall Writs made by Statute cannot be altered without Statute In an assize of a new office it ought to be shewed what profit belongs to it but not for an ancient office because that is sufficiently knowne Syms Case 6. Jacobi fo 51. TEnant in taile levyeth a fine with warranty and dyeth the warranty discends upon the issue of him in the remainder inheritable to the taile and another the issue in taile brings a formedon and is barred for all for the warranty is intire and barreth every one upon whom it discends of all his right as if one seised of three acres maketh a feoffement of one with warranty and dyes having issue two Daughters who make partition the Mother purchaseth the part of one brings dower against the feoffee who Vouches the Daughters shee shall recover all the other acre of the other Daughter if Tenant by the curtesie make a feoffement with warranty and dyes and his Sonne heire of the Feme recovers and assets discends after the feoffee shall have a Scire facias to have the Land first recovered by the Statute of Glouc. c. 3. but if assets descend to the Heire in taile bound with a lyneall warranty after recovery in formedon the Feoffee shall have a Scire facias to have the assets for otherwise if the recoverer alien the assets the issue of him will recover the Land in taile againe but in these cases the discontinuee ought to confesse the title of the Demandant and pray that if assets descend after they may discend unto him for if he plead a warranty and assets this is peremptory unto him if it be found that assets did not discend for the Statute is that a Scire facias shall issue out of the rolls of the Justices and in this case there is no ground for the Scire facias in the Record but in this case if the issue in taile pleads no assets and assets are found but not to the value the tenant shall have a Scire facias to recover the assets discended after for that false plea of the Vouchee Warranty and estoppell discend upon the heire generall and warranty barreth although that he upon whom it discends claimeth not by him that made it but so doth not an estoppell but estoppells with recompence binde the right of one who claimeth not by him that made it Roger Earle of Rutlands Case 6. Jacobi fo 55. THe King grants the pannage and herbage of a Park to M. for life and reciting this grants it to the Earle of Rutland for his life 1. Resolved the King hath three manner of inheritances 1. Some which he cannot excercise himselfe and cannot grant them in reversion or remainder as Corodies and Churches of which he is Patron 2. Others which he cannot excercise himselfe but may grant them in reversion or remainder as offices 3. Others which he may excercise himselfe and may grant as Lands Houses c. 2. The King here is not deceived for when he reciteth here that M. had for life and grants for life this inureth as by Law it may that is as a grant in reversion 3. In this case the grant to the Earle shall commence after the determination of the estate of M. and if the King grants Land to one and his Heires Habendum to him and his Assignes it is good and the Habendum shall be rejected for the honour of the King See the Lord Chandos case in the sixth Booke and when a Charter of the King may be taken to two intents good in many cases it shall be taken to such intent as is most beneficiall for the King but if it may be taken to one intent good and to another void then for the honour of the King and benefit of the Subject then it shall be taken so that it may take effect Beechers Case 6. Jacobi fo 58. B. Plaintiffe in Debt Se retraxit by attourney and by the judgement is not amerced he brings eror 1. Resolved a Retraxit ought to be in proper person for at the common Law every one who appeared ought to come in proper person and make his attorney after by license of the Court but if it be without writ he cannot without a writ of Attornato faciendo In cases where one may make an attourney but for contempt is bound to appeare in person if he appeare by attourney this is not error because the court may dispens with the contempt otherwise where he cannot appeare by Law by attorney as here for if he appeare by attourny this is error 2. B. ought to be amerced if upon a Nonsuite a Fortiori upon a Retraxit and although it is for his advantage yet he may assigne it for error because the judgement is not perfect and because it is for the advantage of the King and it shall not be amended because the act of the Court. 3. Where one disclaimes he shall not have a Writ of error because he hath confessed that he had no right otherwise it is upon a Retraxit for this is but a barre of the action à fortiori here where it wat void done by an attourney
a Stranger be not in another part of the House but this was before 39. Eliz. cap. 15. whereby clergy is taken away without putting any feare if he rob any man of above the value of five shillings Accessory before in robbing a House in the day is ousted of Clergy by 4. 5. Phi● Mary Accessory in robbing a Booth in the night or day or out House upon 39. Eliz. shall have his Clergy Nota Although a Statute takes away Clergy from the principall yet the accessory before or after shall have it and where by statute for any offence a man is ousted of his Clergy the indictment must containe the offence with the circumstances in the Statute Dyer 99. and 183. And A. P. was ordered to be hanged in Chaines c. Metcalfs Case 12. Jacobi fol. 38. In Accompt IUdgement is given against M. Quod computet ideo in misericordia quia prius non computavit and before finall Judgement Error is brought 1. Resol It lyeth not 1. Because the Writ of Error saith Si juditium inde redditum sit which shall be intended of the principall Judgement as the Feast of St. M. shall be intended the principall Feast and the Feme shall be received upon default of her Baron after judgement of admeasurement before the principall judgement 2. It shall be intended an intire judgement therfore in an action against two if one plead to the issue and the other confesseth and judgement given against him he shall not have error before the Plea determined against the other for otherwise there would be a failer of right for the Kings Bench cannot proceed upon the Record nor the Common place because it is removed 3. The first judgement is not ad grave damnum for by that he looseth nothing but judgement of the arrearages and damages is the end of the originall 4. This is not properly a Judgement but an Award of the Court as ouster of ayde in partitione facienda an awarde quod partitio fiat c. which are but interlocutory and not definitive 5. They have day by the Roll untill the last judgment but if a Felon dye after the exigent awarded and before attainder a Writ of Error lyeth for necessity for otherwise his goods are forfeited by awarding of the exigent without remedy if diverse are sued by severall Praecipes and Judgement given against one he shall have error before judgement given against the other and if error be in the originall the tenor onely shall be certified for otherwise the Court cannot proceede against the others 2. It was Resolved That the Record is not removed because untill finall Judgement be given the Chiefe Justice of the Common place hath no authority to send it and they may proceed notwithstanding the Roll be marked Mittitur Richard Godfreys Case 12. Jacobi fol. 42. TWelve chiefe pledges according to the custome of the Mannor to present at the Leet that every one of themselves ought to pay for themselves 10 s. pro certo letae the Stewart imposeth a Fine of 6 l. upon them the Lord distreineth for the Fine and certainty of Leet one of the pledges brings Replevin and judgement was given for the Plaintiffe 1. Resol The Fine is not well assessed for it ought to be severall and not joynt as it is because the offence is severall and although that the offence be joynt yet the Fine shall be severall as in disseisin and trespasse But for the incertainty of the persons and infinitenesse of the number many may be fined together as a Towne for the escape of a Felon and the reasonablenesse and excessivenesse of the Fine shall be determined by the Judges Excessus in re qualibet jure reprobatur communi as excessive distresse excessive ayde and excessive amerciament are against the Common Law 2. If the Fine be imposed erroneously it may be avoyded by Plea for he had no other remedy 3. The Lord cannot distraine pro certo Letae without prescription because it is against common right but he may for a Fine or amercement but for an amercement in a Court Baron the Lord must prescribe a Fine because it is assessed by the Court needs not to be affered but an amercement must be affered by the Countrey 4 Admitting that he may distraine pro certo Letae he shall have a returne although hee had not cause to distraine for the Fine for where one brings an Action for two things and it will not lie for one of them it shall abate onely for that if he cannot have a better action for it but if he may it shall abate for the whole as in a Formedon of Land and of an advowson the Writ shall stand for the Land so if a man avow for diverse Rents arreare and it appeareth that parcell is not yet due yet the avowry is good for the residue but if a man bring a Writ of Entry in nature of an Assize of two Acres where it appeareth that for one Acre he ought to have a Writ of Entry in the per there all shall abate for this extends not to the action but to the Writ onely Richard Lifords Case 12. Jacobi fol 46. IN trespasse the Defendant pleads that J. L. was seized in fee and demised to T. S. and M. P. excepting Trees above twenty one yeares growth if not decayed for their lives and covenanted to stand seized de tenementis predictis cum pertinentijs superius dimissis to the use of R. L. in taile c. and the Defendant as Servant to the sayd R. L. entered and sold Trees and Judgement was given against the Plaintiffe 1. Resol That the Trees notwithstanding the exception remaine parcell of the inheritance and are not Chattels but shall descend to the Heire for the Law doth not favour severance of the Trees from the Land therefore if one bargaine and sell Land upon which there are Trees they shall not passe without inrolement 2. If there had not been such an exception the generall interest of them is in the Lessor and the Lessee had but a particular interest in them and the Lessor may sell them without license of the Lessee to take effect after the Lease determined and tithes shall not be payd for them because they are parcell of the inheritance 2. By the exception of them the soile is not excepted but onely so much as sustaineth the Tree and if he by licence of the lessee root them up the lessee shall have the soile but by exception of Wood the Land it selfe is excepted if an Acre or an advowson be severed from the Mannor by exception upon a Lease for life it shall not be parcell of the Mannor againe otherwise of trees for they were not severed in facto because they grow out of the Land 3. A thing in possession cannot be parcell of a reversion upon an estate for life but Trees which grow out of the Land and Fish or Deer in the Land may and shall passe with it
Lands to the use of himselfe and of the heires males of his body And for default thereof to the use of the Queene her heires and successors After the Tenant in tayle in possession suffereth a common recoverie with voucher And whether it was a barre to the issue in tayle was the question And it was adjudged that the issue in tayle was barred for good considerations are too general to raise any use without speciall averment that valuable or other good consideration was given Resolved that the Land should continue in his name and bloud is not a consideration to raise a use to the Queene though the limitation to her were for the preservation of the tayle against discontinuances and barres for there wants quid pro quo Resolved if he had said in consideration that the Queene is the head of the weale publique and hath the care and charge as well to preserve peace as for to repell hostility yet 't is no good consideration for Kings ex officio ought to governe their Subjects in tranquillity which is implyed in the word King And admit the consideration had been sufficient to raise a use to the Queene yet that would not preserve the estate tayle by force of the Act 34. H. 8. for no estate tayle is preserved by the said Act except the same estate tayle be of the creation or provision of the King and not where the estate tayle is given or created of a common person without provision of the King as may appeare by the preamble of the Act. Resolved that before the Statute of 34. H. 8. a common recovery barred a tayle created by the King Lanes Case 29. Eliz. fo 16. THe Queene seised of a Mannor in right of her Crowne by her Steward granted coppie-hold Lands parcell thereof to one by coppie according to the custome in Fee And after the Queene under the Exchequer Seale made a Lease of the same Lands to another for 21. yeares who granted the same Tearme to the coppie-holder and after the Queene reciting the Lease for yeares granted the reversion thereof in Fee the Tearme of 21. yeares expired The Patentee of the reversion entreth upon the coppie-holder and the entrie was adjudged good Resolved that the Lease under the Exchequer Seale was good by the usage there for the course of every Court is as a law of which the common law takes notice without alledging of it in pleading and every Court at Westminster is bound to take notice of the Customes of other Courts otherwise of Courts in the Countrey and the order of Exchequer is to make Leases by Committimus such land Resolved that the estate of the Coppie-holder was determined by the acceptance of the Lease for yeares And so it was adjudged against the Coppie-holder for notwithstanding that the Coppie-holders estate is taken to be but an estate at will yet the custome hath so established the estate of the Coppieholder that he is not removeable at the will of the Lord so long as he performes his customes and services and by the same reason the Lord cannot determine his interest by any act that he can doe And so it hath been adjudged many times And the aceptance of this Lease was the proper act of the Coppie-holder Resolved that by the severance of the free-hold from the Mannor the Coppiehold estate is not extinguished Baldwyns Case 31. Eliz. fo 23. THings which lye in grant and take their essence and effect by delivery of a Deed without other ceremony as rent or common out of Lands c. by the premisses of the Deed to one and his heires habendum to the grantee for yeares or life this habendum is repugnant to the premisses for the Fee passeth by the premises by the delivery of the Deed and therefore the habendum is voyd And when a man giveth Lands by Deed in Fee by the premisses habendum to the Lessee for life there the habendum is voyd and when livery is made the effect of the Deed shall be taken the most strongly against the Feoffor and the best for the Feoffee When a ceremony is requisite to the perfection of an estate in the premisses limitted and to the estate limitted in the habendum no ceremony is requisite but onely the delivery of the Deed although the habendum be of meaner estate then the premisses the habendum shall stand good and qualifie the generalitie of the premisses as a Fee granted in the premisses habendum for yeares it is for yeares and no inheritance Note There is a diversity betwixt the estate implied in the premisses and expressed as if A. grant a rent to B. this is an estate for life but if the habendum be for yeares this is good and qualifies the implication of the premisses Case of Bankrupts 31. Eliz fo 25. REsolved that a grant or assignement of goods by a Bankrupt after the Commission awarded which is matter of Record of which every one ought to take notice and though to a Creditor in satisfaction of his debt is voyd and that a sale of such goods by the Commissioners is good Which sale by the Statute of 13. of the Queene ought to be equall to every one rate and rate like according to the quantity c. And the Court resolved that the proviso in the said Statute concerning gifts bona fide doth not make any gift good but excludes them out of the penalty c. Commissioners may sell by Deed without Inrollment and though they have not seene the goods agreed that the distribution ought to be severall not joynt for the one debt may be greater then the other and in this case the Jury found that the Commissioners sold the goods to three Creditors joyntly but further that the Bankrupt was indebted to them in 273. pounds which shall be intended a joynt debt and so good Resolved that the act giveth benefit to such as will come and not to them that refuse vigilantibus non dormientibus jura subveniunt and every Creditor may take notice of the Commission being matter of Record Bettisworths Case 33. Eliz. in communi Banco fo 31. A Lease for yeares was made of one Messuage one Close called Raynolds and of divers other Lands in Dale and afterwards the Lessee being in the house the Lessor entred into the same Close and maketh a Feoffment of the Messuage and of the Lands therewith demised and maketh livery in the same Close and afterwards the Lessee reentreth into the said Close And if this was a good Feoffment and livery of seison of the said Close the Lessee nor any for him being in the said Close was the question And it was adjudged that the livery and seison was voyd as well for the Close as for the Messuage and the other Land therewith demised For the Possession of the Messuage which is his Castle is a good possession of the Lands therewith demised and it matters not whether livery be made on the Land within view of the
the Donor was in possession and used them and fraud is alwayes apparelled with trust and trust is the cover of fraud Sixthly it was contained in the deed that it was honesty truely and bona fide Et clausulae inconsuetae semper juducunt suspitionem and it was resolved although it was a due debt to Twyne and a good consideration of the deed yet it was not within the proviso of the said Act of 13. Eliz. By which it is provided that the said Act doth not extend to any estate or interest in Lands c. goods and chattells made upon good consideration and Bona fide for although it be upon good and true consideration yet it is not Bona fide for no deed shall be deemed to be made Bona fide within the said proviso that is accompanied with any trust for the proviso saith upon good consideration and Bona fide so as good consideration doth not serve if it be not also Bona fide Therefore good Reader if any deed be made to thee in satisfaction of any debt by one that is indebted unto others also First let it be in publick manner before Neighbours Secondly valued-by good men to a true value Thirdly take them out of the possession of the Donor presently for continuance of possession in the Donor is a marke of trust There are two considerations Viz. Consideration of blood or nature and valuable consideration And if one that is indebted to five severall persons every one 20. l. in consideration of naturall affection doth give all his goods unto his Sonne or Cosen The intention of the Statute was that the consideration in this case should be valuable for equity requires that this deed that defeates others shall be made of as high a consideration as the things are that are so defeated thereby for it is to be presumed that the Father if he had not beene indebted unto others would not dispossesse himselfe of all his goods and subject himselfe to his Cradle And therefore it shall be intended that it was to defeate his Creditors And if a consideration of nature or blood should be a good consideration within this proviso the Statute would serve for little or nothing and no creditor should be sure of his Debt A feoffment made solely in consideration of nature or blood shall not take away the use raysed upon valuable consideration but it shall take away a use raised in consideration of nature for both considerations are in Equali jure and of the same nature Many men marvaile the reason that so many acts and Statutes are dayly made this Verse answereth Queritur ut crèscunt tot magna volumina legis In promptu causa crescit in orbe dolus And because fraud abounds in these dayes more then in former times it was resolved that all Statutes made against fraud shall be liberally expounded for to suppresse the fraud and according to this see severall resolutions in the Booke at large It was resolved that no purchasor may avoyd a precedent conveyance made by fraud but he that is a purchasor for money or other valuable consideration paid for consideration of blood is a good consideration but not such a consideration as is intended by the Statute 27. El. ca 4. for valuable consideration is onely good consideration by the same act Anderson chiefe Justice of the common banck said That a man who is of small capacity and not able to governe his Lands that discends unto him and being disposed to ryot and disorder by the mediation of his friends by open Act conveyes his Lands to them upon trust and confidence that he shall take the profits for his maintainance and that he shall have no power to wast or consume them And after he being seduced by deceitfull and covetous persons bargained for small summes his Lands of great value this bargaine although it were for money was holden to be out of this Statute for this act was made against all fraud and deceit and shall not ayd any purchasor that commeth not to the Lands for good considerations lawfully without fraud or deceit And in this case Twyne was convicted of fraud and he and all the others of a ryot Resolutions P. 44. of the Queene upon the Statutes of Fines fo 84. A. Tenant for life the remainder to B. in taile the remainder to B. and his heires B. levies a Fine hath issue and dyes before all the Proclamations passed the issue then beyond the Sea the Proclamations are made the issue retournes and upon the land claimes the remainder Resolved that the estate which passed was not determined by the death of tenant in taile so if tenant in taile of a rent Advowson Tythes Common c. grants by Deed and dyes for if the issue brings a Formedon for the rent he makes the grant voidable if he distraines or claimes it upon the land he by this determines his election And there is no diversity betwixt tenant in taile of a rent c. and tenant in taile of a reversion or a remainder upon an estate for life though in the first case the issue may have a Formedon presently after the death of tenant in taile Holden by Popham and divers other Justices that the Statute of 32. H. 8. hath inforced the case that the estate which passes by the Fine of tenant in taile shall not be determined by his death for by this 't is provided that Fines levied of any lands c. intailed immediatly after the Fine ingrossed and Proclamations made shall be a barre if the Fine cannot be a barre without continuance the Statute hath provided that the estate shall continue for it provides for all necessary incidents to the perfection and consummation of it Every Fine shall be intended with Proclamations for 't is most beneficiall for the conusee and all Fines being the generall assurance of land are levied according Resolved that though by the death of tenant in taile a right of the estate taile descends to the issue for that the tenant in taile dyed before all the Proclamations passed yet when they are passed without claime this right is barred by the Statute of 32. H. 8. Resolved by all the Judges and Barons but three that the issue in this case being heire and privy cannot by any claime save the right of the taile which is descended to him but that after the Proclamations he shall be barred for 't is provided that every Fine after the ingrossing of it and Proclamation had and made shall be a finall end and conclude as well privies as strangers And if no saving had been all strangers had been barred also and all the exceptions extend onely to Strangers but the issue is privy To the objection if by the equity of the Statutes the issue cannot claime c. to what purpose are the Proclamations with such solemnities Answered 32. H. 8. being an Act of explanaiton of 4. H. 7. as to the Fine by tenant in taile shall
limitation of any estate Resolved that when the Lord admits Cestuy que use for life the reversion is in him that surrendered not in the Lord for he is but an instrument Resolved that a man may surrender to the use of his Wife though that Cestuy que use is in by him that surrendered because the Husband did not doe this immediatly to the Wife but by a second meanes Viz. By surrender to the Lord and by admittance of the Lord. Resolved that when B. surrendered out of Court and before that 't was presented in Court he dyes yet after being presented according to the custome 't is good otherwise if it had not beene presented according to custome so if the Tenants in whose hands c. dyes yet if it be proved 't is good enough so Queintons Case before if Cestuy que use c. dyes before admittance his Heires shall be admitted Downe and Hopkins Case 36. of the Queene fo 29. REsolved that where the custome of a Mannor was to grant Coppies for one two or three lives that a grant to a Woman during her viduity is within the custome for 't is an estate for life but every grant for life is not Durante viduitate issue was whether the custome was that the Wife of a Copy-holder after the death of the Husband should have for life and 't was given in evidence that she should have during her viduity and adjudged that the evidence did not maintaine such custome for 't is a lesse estate then for life But in the principall Case 't is a greater estate which is warranted by the custome and therefore a lesse is within it according to Graveners Case before 'T was said that a Lord may retaine a Steward by word to hold Courts c. as a Bayliffe and this retainer shall serve till he be discharged Harris and Jayes Case 41. of the Queene fo 30. REsolved that a Lord may retaine one to be Steward of his Mannor and to hold Courts by word as in the Case before Resolved that where a Copy-hold escheates by attainder of felony of a Copy-holder of the Queene that the Steward may grant it over Ex officio without speciall warrant for the custome warrants the Steward to grant it and this shall binde the Queene and her Heires c. But yet his duty is before to informe the Lord Treasurer Chancellor or Barons of the Exchequer or any of them for his better direction Resolved that the Auditor or Receiver of the Queene hath no power to retaine a Steward to hold courts c. But it behooves that the Steward who makes such voluntary grants upon escheats or forfeitures to be good to have Letters Pattents of the Stewardship of the same Mannor And 't was said that 't was adjudged in the Lady Holcrofts Case that where one was retained generally by word to be Steward of a Mannor and to hold Courts that he may take surrenders of customary tenants out of Court Shaw and Thompsons Case 33. of the Queene fo 30. REsolved that a Woman shall not be indowed of Copy-hold without speciall custome and that when a Woman is to be indowed by custome she shall have all incidents to Dower and shall recover damages by the Statute of Merton because her Husband dyed seised and therefore the recovery of damage of 50. l. in the Court of the Mannor was allowed though this exceeded 40 s Resolved that no Action of Debt lyes for these damages at common Law for upon such judgement no error or false judgement lyes but the remedy is in the Court of the Mannor or Chancery Fenner Justice said That he had seene a Record 36. H. 8. where the Lord by Petition to him had for certaine errors in the proceeding reversed such a judgement and upon this the Defendant maintained an Audita quaerela to be restored to the damages recovered against him See 14. H. 4. cited before in Brownes Case And 7. E 4. 29. Hoe and Taylors Case 37. of the Queene fo 30. REsolved that Underwood growing upon parcell of the Mannor may by custome be granted by Copy of Court roll and 't is a thing of perpetuity to which a custome may extend for after every cutting the underwood growes Ex stipitibus So 't was resolved that Herbage or any profit of any parcell of the Mannor may by custome be granted by Copy and 't was said that a faire appendant to the Mannor of C. in S. is granted by Copy and this explaines the reason of the first pillar in Murrels Case Frenches Case 18. 19. of the Queene fo 31. REsolved if the Lord Lease for yeares life or make any other estate by deed or without deed of Copy-hold Land forfeited escheated c. to him that this Land can never be granted againe by Copy for the custome is destroyed for during these estates the Land was not demised nor demisable by Coppy So if the Lord make a feoffement and enter for condition broken but if the Lord keepe it in his hands a long time or leases it at will he his heires or assignes may regrant it So if the interruption be tortious as by disseisin and discent false verdict or erroneous judgement for Non valet impedimentum quod de jure non sortitur effectum quod contra legem fit pro infecto habetur But if it be extended upon a Statute or recognizance acknowledged by the Lord or if the Wife of the Lord hath this Land assigned to her in Dower though these impediments are by act in Law yet for that the interruptions are lawfull the Land cannot be after granted by Copy If a Copy-holder accept a Lease for yeares of the Lord of his Copy-hold 't is destroyed for ever If a Copy-holder take a Lease for yeares of the Mannor his Copy-hold hath not continuance Hides Case adjudged 17. of the Queene But there 't was resolved that such Lessee might regrant the Copy to whom he would for the Land was alwayes demised or demisable If a Coppy-hold be surrendered to the Lessee his Executors or assignes may regrant it If a Copy-hold escheate to the Lord his alienee by fine feoffement c. may regrant it Foiston and Crachroodes Case 29. and 30 of the Queene fo 31. ADjudged that where a Copy-holder in pleading alledges Quod infra Man praed talis habetur nec non a toto tempore cujus c. habebatur consuetudo Viz. quod quilibet tenentes praedictorum tenement vocat C. have used to have common in such a place parcell of the Mannor and that he is a Copy-holder of the said Tenement that this custome as well for the matter as the forme was good for the Copy-holder cannot prescribe in his owne name for the exility and basenes of his estate and if he had claimed common in the soile of another he ought to prescribe in the name of the Lord Viz. That the Lord and all his ancestors and all those whose estate c. have
rent for though it be parcell of the grange and A. and F. have the reversion of the terme and so it may be said in their tenure yet for that A. then had not H. in his occupation 't is not charged Resolved that the lessee at will is chargeable by 32. H. 8. ca ' 37. for where things are due in right and become remedilesse by the act of God the Parliament which gives remedy for this shall be favourably construed and extend to advance the remedy proportionably to the defect of the Law according to the mind of the makers and therefore the Feoffee of the Feoffee in infinitum shall be charged for otherwise the Statute shall be in vaine c. Resolved if the grantee in fee or for life of a rent service or charge after 't is arreare grants over the tenant attournes the grantor dyes his Executors are not within the Statute for by the grant the arrerages are lost and were not due to the testator tempore mortis as the Statute speakes and after the grant the testator could not distraine for the arrerages and the act gives remedy onely where the arrerages are due and become remedilesse by the act of God Sharpe and Pooles case 17. of the Queene a rent was granted to a woman for life 't is arreare she takes husband 't is arreare the wife dyes the husband brings debt against the heire being terrtenant for all arrerages Resolved that for the arrerages before the marriage he had no remedy at common Law but for the other he had debt Objected that the husband shall not have the arrerages due before by this Statute 1. Because at common Law the Executors of the wife may have an action for them and the Statute gives remedy when Executors cannot have an action and doth not intend to toll the remedy from the common Law 2. The branch says due in the wives life so the arrerages ought to incurre when she is his wife Resolved to the contrary for the Statute says due and unpaid in the wives life and the common Law gives remedy for the arrerages of an estate for life incurred in the life of the wife and therefore the Statute did not intend to extend to these arrerages but to the arrerages due before for Verba accipienda sunt cum effectu Resolved that a Feme covert cannot make an Executor without assent of her husband and the administration of her goods of right belong to the husband And the Statute in naming the woman wife intends noely to describe and designe the condition of the womaln not to imply that the arrerages ought to incurre during coverture Rawlins case 29. 30. of the Queene fo 52. A. Possessed of a house for thirty yeares except a Stable of which B. was possessed for two yeares granted all his interest to C and demised the Stable to B. for sixe yeares by Indenture after the end of the two yeares C. redemises all to A. for twenty one yeares rendring twenty pounds per annum and to pay a Fine of twenty five pounds upon condition for to reenter for non payment of the rent or Fine before the day of payment A. redemises the Stable to C. for ten yeares the rent was behinde the Fine was not paid C. enters not into the Stable nor B. attournes Resolved that where the verdict was entered three termes past and in the Roll the demise to B. for six yeares was not enterd to be by Indenture that the Roll shall be mended because the note of the speciall verdict which the Jury exhibited to the Court remaining with the Secondary purports that the Jury found the demise prout by which it doth appeare to the Court that the demise was shewne in evidence and reference made by the note to it and so 't was in Gomersalls case Resolved though the condition is of two parts in the dis-junctive for non-payment of rent or of the summe in grosse yet if A. had redemised any part of the house to C. and C. enters by which the rent is suspended that all the condition as well for the collaterall summe as for the rent is also suspended because the condition is intire and cannot be divided by the act of the parties Resolved that if A. had redemised any part to C. though C. never enters the rent is suspended and though a stranger occupy it Resolved that the lease by A. to B. for six yeares though he had nothing at the time was good by conclusion by the Indenture and when C. redemised all to A. then was the interest bound with this conclusion then when A. redemises to C. the Stable C. is also concluded for all parties and privies in estate or interest are bound by the Estoppell then the case is no other but that A. demises for six yeares the Stable to B and after demises to C. for twenty yeares which is a good Lease in reversion for fourteene yeares this is no suspension of the rent or condition for 't is no grant of the reversion but a future interest in reversion no terme but an interest of a terme as the pleading is and notwithstanding such grant the reversion is in the grantor without atturnement and he shall have the rent upon the first lease but if there be an atturnement the reversion passes and suspension will follow And therefore 't was agreed if a man leases for twenty one yeares rendring rent and a reentry the lessee leases to the lessor for six yeares to commence two yeares after the rent is arreare and by this he shall defeate the future interest vested in him Resolved that this Estoppell being found by verdict the Court ought to judge upon all the speciall matter according to Law and because they are sworne ad veritatem dicendam they did well to finde the truth of the case and leave it to the Court by Wray chiefe Justice in Pledalls case the Jury was attainted for not finding such a lease by conclusion intending 〈◊〉 they being sworne ad veritatem dicend ' 〈◊〉 not bound to finde it for the Court held that the interest of the land as to parties and privies was bound and no conclusion shall be by such Indenture after the terme ended by Wray Resolved if lessee for twenty yeares leases for two yeares rendring rent and grants all his terme and interest if the lessee attournes the reversion passes and if no attournement be yet the interest in reversion passes for the grant of a man shall not be adjudged voyd if to any intent it may take effect Resolved if lessee for twenty yeares of a house leases part for two yeares and after leases to another all for ten yeares rendring rent so that it inures as a Lease in reversion for part that the rent shall issue out of all and of the interest of the terme though it be not any estate that may be surrendred and though it be conjoyned with land in possession Error was brought upon this
judgement and this error assigned for that R. the plaintiffe was an Infant and was admitted by his Gardian and no Record made of it as 't is used in Banco but onely recited in the Count J. R. per A. B. gardianum suum ad hoc per curiam specialiter admissum queritur Which was disallowed by all the Justices upon search and view of many presidents which make a Law in this Court yet some presidents were as in Banco Note Reader according to the opinion of Wray 't was resolved in Londons case that if a man takes a lease by Indenture of his own land this is an Estoppell but during the terme and then both parts of the Indenture belong to the lessor Wardens and Commonalty of Sadlers case 30. of the Queene fo 54. BY Mandamus 't was found before B. M●yor of London Escheator of the City and th● inquisition was returned in Chancery that T. C. held of the King c. and dyed seised without heire the Wardens c. shewed their right that R. M. was seised in fee and devised to them in fee and that they were seised till by C. disseised and shew the custome of London that a Citizen and Freeman may devise in Mortmaine and averred that R. M. was c. Tempore mortis and upon this great question was whither a Monstrans de droit lyes or it ought to be by Petition See the Case at large for this Learning Bereblock and Redes Case was cited to be adjudg'd if A. be bound in a recognizance Statute c. and after a recovery in Debt is had against him and he dyes his Executors ought first to pay the Debt upon the Recovery though it be puny to the Statute c. for though both be Records yet the judgement in the Court upon judiciall and ordinary proceeding is more notorious and conspicuous and of more high and eminent degree then a Statute c. taken in private by the consent of Parties Forse and Hemblings Case 37. Eliz. in com Banc fo 60. ALice Allen seised of certaine Messuages in Fee maketh her will in Writing and thereby demiseth that if James Amynd doth survive her that then she doth demise and bequeatheth the same messuage to him and his Heires And afterwards the said Alice did Intermarry with the said James and during her coverture she said often the said James should never have the said Messuage by her said Will Alice dyed without issue and James survived and the Question was whither the Will was countermanded by the said Marriage or not and if not whither by the words of revocation after the Marriage was a Countermand and it was adjudged upon great deliberation that the taking of a Husband and the coverture at the time of her death was a countermand of the Will For the making of a Will is but an inception thereof and it doth not take any effect untill the death of the Devisor For Omne testamentum morte consummatum est voluntas est ambulatoria usque extremum vitae exitum And it should be against the nature of a Will to be so absolute that he that made the same being of sane memory may not countermand the same And therefore the taking of her Husband being her owne proper act doth amount to a countermand in Law Also 't was said that after Marriage all the will of the Wife in judgement of Law is subject to the will of her Husband and a Feme Covert hath no Will and therefore the Countermand after Marriage was of no force Quod fuit concessum per tot Cur. Harlakendens Case 31. El. In banco regis fo 62. THe Earle of Oxford leased to A. B. and C. except the Trees for 21. yeares C. assigned to D. the Earle sells the Trees to A. B. and D. they leased to E. and after sell the Trees the Vendee cuts them the Lessee brings Trespasse When a man maketh a Lease for life or yeares the Lessee hath but onely a speciall interest or property in the Trees being Timber as things annexed to the Land but if the Lessee or another severs them the property and interest of the Lessee is determined and the Lessor may take them as things which were parcell of his Inheritance It was also resolved that this clause without impeachment of wast doth not give to the Tenant for life any greater interest in the Trees then he had by the demise of the Land but onely that it will serve that he shall not be impeached in any action of Wast or to recover damages or the place wasted * This is adjudged otherwise by all the Judges of England in Lewes Bowles Case in the 11. Report It was also resolved that if an House fall by tempest or other act of God the Lessee for life or yeares hath a speciall interest to take Timber to reedifie the same if he will But if the Lessee suffer the House to fall or take it downe the Lessor may take his Timber as parcell of his Inheritance and the interest of the Lessee is determined and he may have wast and treble damages Resolved that the Lessee by the grant had an absolute property in the Trees so that by the Lease of the Land they did not passe and he hath not equall ownership in both and it should be a prejudice to him if they should be joyned to the Land for then he could not cut during the terme without wast and after he shall not have them and the Lessor shall not have them against his owne act And here A. B. and D. were Tenants in common of the Land and joyntenants of the Trees and so their interest of severall qualities and therefore cannot be a union betwixt them but upon a feoffement if the Feoffor accept the Trees they are in property divided though In facto they remaine annexed to the Land for it is not felony to cut them c. and if the Feoffor grants them to the Feoffee they are reunited in property as well as De facto and the Heire shall have them not the Executors for the feoffee hath an absolute ownership in both and it is more benefit to him that they are reunited It was resolved That if Tymber Trees be blowne downe with the winde the Lessor shall have them for they are parcell of his inheritance and not the Tenants for life or yeares but if they be Dotards without any Timber in them the Tenant shall have them It was adjudged that wast may be committed in glasse in the Windowes for it is parcell of the house and discends as parcell of the inheritance to the Heire and the Executors shall not have them although the Lessee put the glasse in the Windowes at his owne cost and if he take them away he shall be punished in wast And 42. Eliz. in com Banco It was resolved that Wainscote whither it be annexed to the house by the Lessor or the Lessee is parcell of the House and there
his consent and after the other two did alien without license and it was adjudged 28. Eliz. that in this case the condition being determined as to one person by the license of the Lessor it was determined in all for when the Lessee alieneth any part of the residue the Lessor may not enter into any part aliened with license and therefore the condition being determined in part is determined in all for the condition being entire may not be apportioned and 16. Eliz. Dyer 334. fuit deny per Popham Chiefe Justice Vide lit 80. b. 4. and 5. Ph. and M. Dyer 152. Bustards Case 1. Jac. fo 121. IN every lawfull exchange of Land this word Excambium imports in it selfe Tacite a condition and a warranty and the other a Voucher and recompence and all in respect of reciprocall consideration the one land being given in exchange for the other but that is a speciall warranty for upon the voucher he shall not recover other Lands in value but those onely which were given in Exchange and this warranty followes onely in privity for none may vouch by force thereof but the parties to the Exchange and their heires and no assignes If A give in Exchange three acres of Land to B. for other three acres and after one Acre is evicted from B. in this Case all the exchange is defeated and B. may enter into all his Lands Beverleys Case de non compos mentis in banco regis 1. Jac. fo 123. EVery act that a man De non compos mentis doth eyther concerning his Lands life or goods eyther done in Court of record or out of Court of record all acts that he doth in any Court of record eyther concerning his Lands or goods shall bind himselfe and all others for ever and those acts which he doth out of Court of record shall binde himselfe during life and in some Cases shall binde all others for ever so as the party himselfe shall not be admitted to stultifie himself or disable himself but an ideot a nativitate may not make Feoffment Gift Lease or Release but it may be avoyded during his Life by office at the Kings suite which shall have relation a tempore Nativitatis to avoyd all acts done by him and after his death the King shall deliver his Lands Rectis Haeredibus foure manner of men de non compos mentis 1. An ideot or foole naturally 2. One which was of good and perfect memory and by the visitation of God hath lost the same 3. Lunaticus qui gaudet lucidis intervallis who somtimes is of good and perfect memory and some other times Non compos mentis 4. He that is so by his owne act as a Drunkard All acts which a Lunatick during the time of his Lunacy doth and all acts which a mad man doth who once was of perfect memory and by the act of God hath lost his understanding are equivalent to the act done by an Ideot but the act which a man doth Qui Gaudet lucidis intervallis at such time as he is of good and perfect memory shall binde him and are good And a Drunkard who for the time of his Drunkenesse is Non compos mentis yet his drunkennesse shall not extenuate his act or offence but doth aggravate his offence and doth not derogate from the act which he doth during the time of his drunkennesse and that as well touching his Life Lands and goods as any other thing that concernes him The King shall have the custody of the Land goods Chattells c. of one non compos mentis to the use of him his Wife Children and Family a man non compos mentis shall not loose his life for felony or murder for no felony or murder can be committed without a felonious intent and purpose and he is deprived of reason understanding and intentions Dicta est fellonia quia fieri debet felleo animo furiosus non intelligit quid agit animo ratione caret non mulum distat a brutis as Bracton saith and stultus dicitur a stupore The End of the Fourth Booke THE FIFTH BOOK Claytons Case 37. Eliz. in Com. Banco fo 1. AN Indenture of demise dated 26. May 25. Eliz. to hold for three yeares from henceforth it was delivered at foure a clock in the afternoone of the twentieth of June after The Question was when the Lease should begin from henceforth shall be taken the day of the delivery inclusive idefi from the making or delivery Traditio loqui facit cartam this Lease must end the nineteenth of June in the third yeare after The day of the delivery is parcell of the tearme but a Die confeccionis or a Die datus the terme beginneth the day after the date from the date and from the day of the date is all one because that in judgement of Law the date includes all the day of the date c. Elmers Case 30. Eliz. Banco Regis fo 2. 1. REsolved that the Statute of 1. El. is a private act whereof the Court shall not take notice without pleading of it 2. Whereas the Bishop ousted his Lessee for yeares and made a Lease for three lives this is voidable by the successor for first the Statute giveth him power to make a Lease for twenty one yeares or three lives and therefore cannot make both 2. Lessee for lives shall have the rent reserved upon the Lease for yeares and shall not pay rent to the Bishop untill the terme determined and so hospitality will decay in the meane time and where 32. H. 8. ca ' 8. provided that the old Lease be surrendered before the making of a new illusory surrender upon condition is not within the act but judgement given against the Plaintiffe for not pleading of the said act of 1. Eliz. Jewells Case 30. Eliz. banco regis fo 3. LEase of a faire reservaing rent is not within the Statute of 1. Eliz. for although the rent be due by reason of the contract yet it is not incident to the reversion and 't is also without remedy by assise or distresse Lord Mountjoyes Case 31. 32. El. banco regis fol. 3. TEnant in tayle according to the Statute with power to make Leases c. reserving the ancient rent maketh a Lease of two distinct farmes re●erving the ancient rents in one summe out of both sthe farmes this is a new rent and not the accustomed rent and if he reserve a lesser rent during his life and after his death then the ancient rent the Lease is not good If Tenant in tayle be seised of three acres of Land every one of them of equall annuall value and all have beene demised for 3. shil per annum in this case he may not demise one of them for 12. d. per annum or two of them for 2. shil per annum and so Pro rata Justice Windams Case fo 31. 32. Eliza. Banco Regis in a Writ of Error fo 7
A Man leaseth S. for 10. yeares and C. for 20. yeares and both to another for 40. yeares after the end of the said severall demises ten yeares expire the last Lessee enters into S. and upon ouster brings trespasse and recovereth for the joynt words of the parties shall be taken Respective and the leases shall commence severally upon the severall determination of the said leases Joynt words shall be taken severally 1. In respect of the severall interest of the grantors as if two Tenants in common grant a rent charge 2. In respect of the severall interest of the grantees as a joynt warranty to two severall Tenants 3. In respect that the grant cannot commence at one time as a remainder limitted to the right heires of I. S. and I. N. 4. In respect of the incapacity of the grantees to take joyntly 5. Ratione subjectae materiae as rent granted to two copartners for equality of partition 6. Ne res destruatur ut evitetur absurdum as in Cessavit the tenure is alleadged by homage fealty and rent and quod in faciendo servitia praedicta cessavit it shall be construed to such services onely as of which a man may cease Brudenells Case 34. Eliz. banco regis fo 9. IF a lease be made to A. during the life of B. and C. without saying during the life of the survivor of them if one of them die yet the estate is not determined But A. shall have the land during the life of the survivor for if a man make a lease of Land to two persons during their lives they assigne over their estate now the assignee hath estate for life of them too and if one dye he shall have the land during the life of the Survivor Note two diversities th one a limitation in this Case aforesaid th' other a condition for if a man demyse Land for 100. yeares if A. and B. live so long in this case if th' one of them dye the Lease is determined for the Lease is conditionall and not Determinable by limmitation of estate and the life of a man is collaterall to the Lease which is but onely a Chattle If an administrator have judgement and dye his Executors cannot sue execution of that judgement but he that shall be subject to the payment of the Debts of the first intestate and that are not the Executors of the administrator vide 26. H. 8. fo 7. Hensteads Case 36. 37. Eliz. com banco fo 10. A Feme lessor or lessee at will taketh Husband the will is not determined for it may be prejudiciall to the Husband to have it determined So if one of the Lessees or Lessors at will dye but in case where one of the joynt Lessees at will dyeth nothing surviveth but the others shall pay all the rent Jues Case 39 40. Eliz. com banco fo 11. I. Leaseth a Mannor to S. for thirty yeares excepting Woode and underwood growing upon it and after Leased to him the Woode for 62. yeares without impeachment of wast and leaseth to him the Mannor for thirty yeares after expiration of the first thirty yeares thirty yeares expire S. maketh wast I bringeth an action of wast 1. Resolved by the exception of Wood and Underwood the soile is excepted and the woods growing c. are of abundance 2. The Wood remaines parcell of the Mannor because the Lessor had the intire freehold otherwise if he had leased for life with such an exception so if one lease a Mannor excepting the advowson for life the advowson is in grosse for life but if he grant the advowson for life it remaines appendant 3. By the acceptance of the third lease the said Lease of the Wood for 62. yeares was presently surrendered because the Lessee hath affirmed the Lessor to be able to Lease Saunders Case fo 12.41 Eliz. com banco In an Action of wast IF a man have Land in part whereof there is a Cole-myne appearing and he demise the Land to another for life or yeares the Lessee may dig for cole c. And the reason is for that the Myne is open at the time of the demyse c. and when he demyseth all his Lands it shall be intended that his meaning was that all the profit of the Land should passe c. but if the Myne be not open but within the Bowels of the Earth at the time of the demise 't is otherwise Also if a man have in his Lands hidden or unknowne Mynes and Lease the same Lands and all Mynes therein the Lessee may dig for them Rosses case 41. 42. Eliz. A Lease is made to A. and his Assignes for his life and the life of B. and C. this is a Lease for three lives and the Survivor of them Countesse de Salops Case fo 13.42 43. Eliz. banco regis SHe brought an action of the Case against Crompton and declared that shee demised to him a House at will Et quod ille tam negligenter improvide custodivit ignemsuum quod domus illa combusta fuit the defendant pleaded Non culpa and it was found not guilty And 't was adjudged that for the permissive wast no Action lyeth against the opinion of Brooke in Title wast 52. And the reason of this judgement was for that at the common Law no remedy lyeth for wast either voluntary or permissive against the Lessee for life or yeares because the Lessee hath interest in the Land by the act of the Lessor and it was his folly to make such a Lease and not to restraine him by Covenant condition c. And by the same reason Tenant at will shall not be punished for permissive wast But if Tenant at will commit voluntary wast as pulling downe of houses cutting of Trees a generall action of trespasse lyeth against him for that these doe amount to the determination of the will without the entry of the Lessor but it was agreed that in some Cases where there is confidence put in the party an action of the Case lyeth for negligence although the Defendant commeth to the possession by the act of the Plaintiffe as 12. E. 4.13 If one doe commit his Horse to one to keepe safely the Defendant Equum illum tam negligenter custodivit quod ob defectum bonae custodiae interijt an action upon the Case lyeth for this Breach of trust also 2. H. 7.11 If my Shepheard which I trust with my Sheepe and by his negligence they be drowned or otherwise perish an action upon the case lyeth against him but in this case at the Barre there was a demise at will made to the Defendant and no confidence repos'd in him wherefore it was ordered that the Plaintiffe should not recover by her Bill Case of Ecclesiasticall Persons 43. Eliz. fo 14. In the High Court of Parliament AT a Parliament holden in this Michaelmasterme it was resolved by the two chiefe Justices Popham and Anderson and diverse other Justices Assistants to the Lord of the
Parliament in the upper House that Leases made to the Queene by Colledges Deans and Chapters or any other having spirituall or Ecclesiasticall Livings against the provision of the Act 13. Eliz. ca ' 10. are restrained by the same Act as well as Leases made to common persons for they are disabled by Parliament to make estates the King being the head of the Common-wealth may not be an Instrument to defeate the provision of an Act of Parliament made Pro bono publico For though the Queene by the common Law had ability to take it yet insomuch the Parliament had dissabled them to make states estates made to the Queene against the Act are voyd Covenants c. Concerning Leases Assurances c. Spencers Case 25. Eliz. fo 16. Banco Regis A Lessee doth Covenant for himselfe his Executors and Administrators with the Lessor that he his Executors or Assignes shall build a Brick Wall upon parcell of the Land demised c. afterwards the Lessee assignes over his tearme to B. in this Case B. is not bound to build the Wall When the Covenant extends to a thing In esse parcell of the demise then the thing to be done by force of the Covenant is Quodammodo annexed and appurtenant to the thing demised and shall run with the Land and binde the Assignee although he be not bound by expresse Covenant But when the Covenant extends to a thing which had not essence at the time of the demise made that cannot be appurtenant or annexed to a thing which had not essence As if a Lessee Covenant to repaire the housses to him demised during the tearme this is parcel of the contract c. and shall bind the Assignee although he be not bound expresly by the Covenant But in this Case the Covenant concernes a thing which had not essence at the time of the demise but to be made after and therefore it shall binde the Covenantor his Executors and administrators and not the assignee for the Law will not annexe the Covenant to a thing which had not essence It was resolved in this Case if the Lessee had Covenanted for him and his assignes c. that in as much as it was to be builded upon the thing demised it should binde the assignee by expresse words Also if a warranty be to one his Heires and assignes by expresse words the assignee shall take benefite thereof and have a Warrantia cartae But although the Covenant be for him and his Assignes yet if the thing to be done be meerly collaterall to the Land demised and doe not concerne the same the Assignee shall not be charged as if the Lessee Covenant for him and his Assignes to build a house upon the Land of the Lessor which is not parcell of the demise or to pay any collaterall Summe of money to the Lessor or to a stranger this shall not binde the Assignee Also in a case of goods as Sheepe Chattell c. there is not any privity or reversion in the Assignee but meerely a thing in action in the personalty which cannot binde any but the Covenantor his Executors or administrators which doe represent him The same Law is if a man demise Lands for yeares with a stock of Cattle or Summe of money rendring rent and the Lessee Covenants for him his Executors Administrators and Assignes to deliver the Stock of Cattle or the Summe of money at the end of the Terme yet the Assignee shall not be charged with the Covenant This word Concessi or Demisi imports a Covenant and if an Assignee of a Lessee be evicted he may have a Writ of Covenant so shall Tenant by Statute or Elegit of a Terme or he to whom the Lease is sould by force of any Execution c. If a man grant to a Lessee for yeares that he shall have so many estovers as shall serve to repaire his House or that he shall burne within his House or such like during the Tearme that is appurtenant to the Land and shall run with the same as a thing appurtenant in whose hands soever the same commeth Assignee of an Assignee Executors of an Assignee ASSIGNES of Executors or Administrators of every Assignee may have Action of Covenant for all are comprised within this word Assignees for the same right that was in the Testator or intestate shall goe to the Executors or administrators It was resolved That the Act of 32. H. 8. c. 24. extendeth onely to Covenants which touch the thing demised and not to collaterall Covenants Slingsbyes Case 29. Eliz. fo 18. Vpon error in the Exchequer Chamber IF any party Covenantor in a Tripertite Indenture breake Covenant all the rest of the parties Covenantees are to maintaine the Action notwithstanding the words of the Covenant are Et ad cum quolibet eo●um But if a man demise to A black Acre to B. white acre to C. greene Acre and Covenant with them and every of them in this Case in respect of the severall interest by these words And every of them the Covenant is made severall but if the demise be made to them joyntly then these words in the Covenant And every of them are made voyd A man cannot binde himselfe to three and to every of them to make that joynt or severall at the Election of severall persons for one selfe same cause for the Court will be in doubt for which of them to give judgement It was resolved that an interest cannot be granted joyntly and severally as if a man grant Prox imam advocationem or make a Lease for Terme of yeares of Land to two joyntly and severally these words severally are voyd and they are joyntenants but a power and authority may be joyntly and severally as to make livery or to sell for they have no interest or Action but are as servants to others And judgement was reversed Rosewells Case 35. Eliz. fo 19. BArgainor of Land covenanteth to make to the Bargainee such assurance as his Councell shall advise the Bargainee himselfe cannot devise it although he be Learned in the Law for then it would be no good plea to say Quod consilium non dedit advisamentum Higginbottoms Case 35. Eliz. Banco regis fo 19. A Parson assumeth to I. S. to make him such an estate in a Rectory as the Counsell of the said I. S. shall devise the Counsell shall be given to I. S. and he shall notifie it to the Parson Stiles Case 38. Eliz. Banco regis fo 20. A Charter with the words Haec indentura without a manuall Act of indenting of the paper or parchment is not an Indenture Sir Anthony Maynes Case 38. Eliz. fo 20. Error in Banco regis SIr A. M. Leaseth to S. for twenty one yeares and bindeth himselfe to make a new Lease unto him upon surrender of the old and Leaseth to another for 80. yeares by fine Scott the first Lessee bringeth debt and had judgement If you be bound to enfeoffee one in the Mannor of D. before
Banco fol. 7. IF one be barred by plea to the Writte hee may have the same Writte againe if by plea to the action of the Writte he may have his right action If the plea be to the action and he be barred by Judgement upon demurrer confession or verdict in personall actions it is a barre for ever and in reall actions he is put to a Writte of higher nature as barre in assize barreth one in Entry in nature of an assize but he may have an assize of Mortdaumester c. But barre is not perpetuall if those who are barred have not the meere right therefore the heire in taile who is barred shall have the same action so of the successor of a Parson if he doth not pray in ayde of the Patron and Ordinary He who lost by default before the Statute of Westminster 2. cap. 4. was put to a Writte of right and if he could not have this Writte he was without remedy In case where a Writte of Entry in the post lyeth now no remedy was before the Statute of Marlebridge cap. 29. but a Writte of right See there divers inconveniences which insue upon the breach or alteration of the auncient and fundamentall rules of the Common Law Interest Reipublicae ut sit finis litium Where a Writte shall be brought by Journeys accounts Spencers case 45. Eliz. Com. Banco fol. 9. IF a formedon abate for undue summons the demandant may have another by Journeys accompts 1. Resol If a Writte abate by default of the demandant himselfe he shall not have another Writte by Journeys accompts otherwise it is if by default of the Clerke or Sheriffe as in this case If a Writte abate for nontenure of all he shall not have c. but if a Praecipe abate for non-tenure of parcell he shall have another so if it abate for joyntenancy of part of the demandant he shall not have a new Writte because he had notice otherwise it is of the part of the tenant And this Writte shall be alwayes betwixt the parties to the first Writte and of the same quantity of acres A Judiciall Writte shall never be sued by Journeys accompts because it shall never abate for forme 2. The second Writte is quasi a continuance of the first Writte therefore all pleas which relate to the purchase of the Writte shall be pleaded from the purchase of the first Writte and costs of the first Writte shall be recovered 32. E. 3. Journeys accompts 16. 15. dayes were allowed Jentlemans case 25. Eliz. concerning Judges of Courts fol. 11 IN the Hundred Courts the Sutors are Judges in the Court of Pypowders the Steward is Judge In a Leet the Steward is Judge In a Court Baron the Sutors which are by the common Law are Judges Rex sectatoribus Curiae c. Vobis mandamus c. ad judicium reddendum c. procedatis but in Redisseisin the Sheriffe is Judge by the Statute of Merton cap. 3. and in the Tourne Morrices case 27. Eliz. Com. Banco fol. 12. IT was adjudged that after the act of 28. H. 8. ca. 1. although joyntenants be compellable to make partition by Writte as well as Copartners yet they may not make partition by words as Copartners may doe by the common Law If two joyntenants make partition by Writte the warranty remaineth otherwise it is if it be by deed by Consent Cases of pardon 29. Eliz. fol. 13. BVrton Parson of Isbock in Leic was deprived Anno 12. El. for committing Adulterie and after by the generall pardon 2. Apr. 13. El. the offence of adulterie in t alia was pardoned before the 14. of February then last past And it was said that before the pardon that crimen adulterij praed transivit in rem judicatam and therefore the sentence should remaine in force And therefore untill the sentence were reversed the deprivation was in force But it was resolved that Burton by vertue of the said pardon is become Parson againe without any sentence declaring the said deprivation to be voyde For by the pardon the adultery which was the cause of the sentence is discharged and by consequence all that which did stand or depend upon the same foundation is also discharged vide 20. El. Dier A. was bound in a Statute of 20. li. to B. B. sued Execution and the Lands of A. were delivered in Execution and after B. maketh Defeasance to A. by Indenture that if A. doe pay to B. 8. li. at a certaine day that then the Statute to be voyde And it was adjudged that although the Statute was executed yet the Defeasance of the Statute was sufficient in Law to defeate as well the Statute as the Execution thereof For the Statute is the foundation of all and if that be defeated all that is builded on the same shall be defeated also 20. ass pla 7. Burglary was excepted out of the generall pardon of 28. Eliz. by that the attainder of burglary is excepted for the offence remaines after judgement and is the foundation of it Arundells case 36. Eliz. Banco Regis fol. 14. AN Inditement of murther in King-streete in W. and the visne from W. and it was vitious for it ought to be from the most certaine place that is the Parish for W. being a Citie it shall be intended that it is greater then the Parish and therefore a new Venire facias was awarded Treports case 36. El. Banco Regis fol. 14. A. Tenant for life remainder in fee to B. both by Deed indented joyne in a Lease to Treport the question was whether the same shall be adjudged in Law the Lease of both of them or not And it was resolved that it was the Lease of A. during his life and the confirmation of B. And after the death of A. it was the Lease of B. and the confirmation of A. and because the plaintiffe had declared of a joynt demise of A. and B. it was adjudged against the plaintiffe in an Ejectione firmae If tenant for life and he in remainder joyne in a Lease rendring rent tenant for life shall have the rent during his life Edens case 37. Eliz. Banco Regis fol. 15. RIens passa by Letters patents shall be tryed where the Land is not where the patent beares date for the Patent is not traversed but the effect of the issue is whether the Queene had the said Land to grant or not Colyers case 37. Eliz. Com. Banco fol. 16. ONe demiseth to his daughter for life and after to his brother paying 20. s. to J. S. the brother had fee for the summe to be paid by him for otherwise he may pay the 20. s. and die without satisfaction but if the payment be to be made out of the profits of the Land he shall have but for life for there he can be at no prejudice Wyldes case 41. Eliz. Banco Regis fol. 16. A Man deviseth Lands to the husband and the wife and to the children of their bodies
in Banco Regis BY the Law it is not sufficient that the testator be of memory when he makes his Will to answer to ordinary and usuall questions but he ought to have a disposing memory so as he is able to make disposition of his Lands with understanding and reason And this is such a memory which is called safe and perfect memory otherwise a Prohibition lyeth at the common Law generally to stay all the proceedings in the spirituall Court as the probate of the Will c. untill this Suggestion be tryed at the common Law Reades Case 42. Eliz. banco regis fo 24. IN trespasse the Defendant makes Title for that A. W. was seised in fee and leased to him the Plaintiffe maketh title by discent and traverseth the Lease and good for it may be true that A. W. was seised and yet that a discent was cast to the Plaintiffe therefore the Lease is most materiall to be traversed Helyars Case 41. Eliz. banco regis fo 24. IN a Replevin the Defendant avoweth by grant of a terme by I. A. to S. from whom he claimeth the Plaintiffe pleads in barre that I. A. married T. who by a former deed granted the terme to the plaintiffe and traverseth the grant made to S. and vitious for he who claimeth by the first assignement shall not traverse the second but he who claimes by the second shall traverse the first But the first Feoffee shall traverse the last feoffment and the last feoffee shall not traverse the first feoffement because fee may be gained by disseisin after the first feoffement but a Lease for yeares caanot Ruddocks case 41. Eliz. banco regis fo 25. IN replevyn against six the Plaintiffe recovers the Defendants bring error the Plaintiffe pleads the release of one of them not good Where diverse are to recover a personall thing the release or default of one barres all but not where they are to discharge themselves of a personalty if they are compelled to joyne as in error and attaint otherwise in Outlary because not compellable to joyne for where they are to discharge themselves they have no joynt interest and although they shall have their damages againe it shall be intended that they paid them of their severall goods otherwise it may be doubted if Execution had beene made of goods which they have joyntly Sharps case 42. Eliz. fo 26. com banco IF a man make a feoffement in Fee or a Lease for life and say to the Feoffee being eyther on the Lands of within the view Enter into this Land and enjoy the same according to this deed c. this is a good livery but the delivery of the deede upon the Lands without any further ceremony or saying doth not amount to a livery Throughgoods Case 9. Jacob in the nineth Booke The actuall delivery of a Writing sealed to the party without any words is a good livery but not a livery of seisin although the Party be upon the ground If I deliver a deede unto the feoffee or Lessee of the Messuage mentioned in the deede in the name of seisin of the said Messuage and of all the Lands tenements c. in the same contained or other such like words without any ceremony or act done this is a good seisin The Case of Souldiers 43. Eliz. fo 27. THe Statutes of 7. H. 7. cap. 1. and 3. H. 8. cap. 5. against Souldiers who run away are acts perpetuall for the word King includeth all his succession and a gift to the King inureth to his Successors Vicount Mountagues Case 43. Eliz. in Scaccar fol. 27. VIcount M. with License of the K. suffers a recovery to B. and D. to uses with power of revocation and limitting of new and revokes and limits new uses the King shall have no fine for alienation 1. Resolved if the King doth license to alien to one and alienation is made to the use of another the King shall not have a fine for although that the King was not informed of his Tenant yet the use is executed by the Statute of 27. H. 8. which can doe no wrong and the proviso in the Statute that a fine shall be paid for executing of uses is to be intended of uses raised by Covenant or declared upon a Fine Feoffement c. when no License of alienation is obtained 2. Although that by revocation and new limittation of uses the tenant of the King be altered yet no fine is due because all ariseth out of the estate of B. and D. which was made with License Greenes Case 44. Eliz. banco regis fol. 29. TEnant for life of a Mannor to which an advowson is appendant the remainder in Fee to I. S. presenteth one who at the suite of the Tenant for life is deprived for not reading the Articles but no notice is given to the Patron the Queene by lapse presents the Defendant Tenant for life and his incumbent die he in the remainder presents the Plaintiffe Greene who recovereth 1. Resolv Although the Patron were party to the Suite and so had notice yet lapse shall not incurre without notice given by the ordinary as the Statute speakes and the notice ought to be speciall that he did not reade the Articles and therefore was deprived and generall notice is not sufficient 2. The Church is voyd Ipso facto by the Statute of 13. Eliz. without deprivation 3. If the Queene present Ratione Lapsus where shee is Patron this is voyd A fortiori when shee had no title at all 4. The Patron is not put to a Quare impedit by presenting him who read not the Articles nor by Collation but by Collation of him who had right to Collate the Patron is put out of possession 5. The Queene may be put out of possession of an advowson because it is transitory but shee cannot be put to a Writ of right of advowson for none can gaine the Inheritance from her by wrong Boothies Case 3. Jacobi com banco fol. 30. THe condition of an Obligation is to deliver an Obligation to the Obligee and to acknowledge satisfaction it must be done in convenient time for acts transitory to be done to the Obligee although a place be appointed shall be done in convenient time and acts of their nature locall ought to be performed in convenient time if concurrence of the Obligor and Obligee be not requisite Also here the delivery of the bond being transitory and the acknowleding satisfaction such an act as may be performed in the absence of the Obligee they ought to be done in convenient time without request but if the Act be locall and their concurrence necessary the Obligor had time during his Life if not hastened by request If the concurrence of the Obligor and a stranger be necessary it ought to be done in convenient time if concurrence of the Obligee and a stranger it ought to be hastened by request And alwaies if the Act to be done is not for the benefit of the Obligee
pending the Writ Resolv That by the common Law by admission and institution the Usurpor gaines the inheritance of the advowson without regard of the nonage of the Patron because he is in by judiciall act and the Bishop shall be supposed not to doe wrong to the Patron and the incumbent shall not be disturbed to excercise his function but the King shall have a Quare impedit at the common Law Collation doth not put him who hath right to present out of possession but if one have right to Collate it doth an infant by the Act of W. 2. c. 5. shall have a Quare impedit if a man usurp upon an infant who had a Mannor to which c. by discent who at full age infeoffeth B. the Church voideth c. by the usurpation the infant was out of possession and his right passed not and seems the Infant is without remedy If a Clerke commeth in by course of Law this gaineth not the inheritance against the right Patron who was not party to the writ The King shall not recover damages by this Statute for he is not within the first branch Si tempus semestre transierit nor within the second Branch for that depends upon the first yet he shall count to damages An incumbent shall not be moved if he be not named in the writ and if he be not admitted c. pending the writ and lapse shall not incurre if the Bishop be named in the Writ otherwise if he be not If he who is presented pending the Writ be in by rightfull Patron or not yet he who recovereth in a Quare impedit shall have a generall Writ to the Bishop which he must execute of necessity and after that the parties may try their titles as the Law shall determine Countesse of Rutlands Case in the Starre-Chamber 3. Jacobi fo 52. THat the person of a Countesse or a Baronesse may not be arrested for Debt or trespasse for although in respect of their Sex they may not sit in the Parliament yet they are Peers of the Realme and shall be tryed by their Peers Stat. 20. H. 6. Peers of the Realme may not be sworne in any inquest a Countesse in Marrying with a Husband doth loose her Name of a Countesse If a Baronesse c. by Marriage marry againe under the Nobility shee looseth her dignity but if she be Noble by Birth or descent yet whomsoever she Marryeth she remaineth Noble for Birth-right is Character intelebilis and that which is gained by Marriage may also be lost by Marriage A Sheriffe ought not to dispute the Authority of Courts but he ought to Execute the Writs to him directed for thereunto be they Sworne Serjeant at Mace upon a cap. ad satisfaciendum came to the the said Countesse in Cheapside being in her Coach and touched her body with the Mace and said I arrest you Madame at the Suite of S. and those were all the words that were us'd therupon compell'd the Coach man to carry her unto the Counter-gate in Woodstreete and the Sheriffe tooke her into his house In this Case it was resolved that the Sheriffe Bayliffe c. upon the Arrest ought to shew at whose suite out of what Court for what cause it is and when the processe is returnable and that this generall Arrest of the Countesse cannot be said that it was by force of the said Writ of Execution and that this Arrest was of the Serjeants owne head without warrant and against Law and that the said Countesse was falsly imprisoned but she remained in the Sheriffes custody 7. or 8. dayes untill shee paid the Debt but because the Arrest was by a fained Action entered in the Counter the Serjeants were sentenced The Lord Chandos case 4. Jacobi fol. 55. THe King grants to B. in taile and in consideration of the surrender of the Letters Patents by force whereof the King is seised in fee granteth to him and his wife and to the heires of B. the reversion passeth for the recitall that the King was seised in fee was but the Collection of the King and no part of the consideration or suggestion of the party And when the King grants land in posse●… if he had but a reversion this shall passe for he is not deceived because lesse passes then he intended Bredimans case 4. Jacobi Com. Banco fol. 56. A Man deviseth a rent for life out of a Mannor and he deviseth the Mannor for yeares the termor enters and pays the rent after the Terme the devisee brings an assize against the Terretenant Resol Payment by lessee for yeares of the rent giveth no seisin to have an assize 1. In respect of the imbecillity of his estate 2. He cannot give seisin because he had not seisin and therefore a Pracipe lyeth not against him because he cannot render seisin but he may take seisin to the use of him in the freehold A disseisor may give seisin of a rent secke because he hath a freehold and it is lawfull 3. A rent secke is caecus siccus therefore it behoveth the first payment which giveth life unto it shall be made by a Tenant of the freehold and in this case being created by devise an Annuity lyeth not thereupon otherwise if it be by grant and Tenant of the freehold ought to attorne to a grant of such a rent over therefore he shall give seisin But seisin by a Bailiffe is good if seisin were had before within sixty yeares and seisin given by Tenant at will is good but it ought to be pleaded as payment by the lessor himselfe If the King hath rent out of a ville to be paid by all the Inhabitants seisin alledged in generall without naming any is good Gatewards case 4. Jac. in Com. Banco fol. 59. TO claime common ratione Commorantiae residen in villa de B. is not good for no man may have interest ●…ommon in respect of a Messuage wherein he hath no interest For custome should alwayes extend to that which hath certenty and continuance and without question tenant in fee simple ought to prescribe in his owne name and tenant for life or yeares by elegit at will c. in the name of him that hath the Fee and he that hath no interest cannot have any common and none that hath any interest although it be but at will and ought to have common but by good pleading he may enjoy the same No improvement might be made in any wasts if this custome viz. in respect of habitation and Comorance should be allowed for tenants for life or yeares at will by elegit by Statute c. of the houses of the Lord should have common in the wasts of the Lord if this prescription were allowed which were inconvenient A Custome that every Inhabitant in B. shall have a way over such grounds either to the Church or Markett c. is a good custome for that is onely easement and no profit and a way or passage may well sequi
countenance that dangerous and desperate error of the Spencers viz. That Homage and Oath of legeance was more by reason of the Kings Crowne that is of his politique capacity then by reason of the person of the King which was condemned by two Parliaments one in the Reigne of E. 2. called Exilium Hugonis le Spencer and the other in 1. E. 3. cap. 1. No one Opinion in all our Bookes is against this judgement The Lord Chancellour and 12. of the Judges concurred in one opinion herein and not in any remembrance so Honourable and Intelligent an Auditory as was at this Case Bulwers Case 27. Eliz. fol. 1. H. H. recovered against the Plaintiffe in the common place and dyeth the Defendant in the name of H. Outlawed the Plaintiffe who brings an Action of the Case in N. where the first Action was brought and recovered for there was the visible torte when matter in one C●unty dependeth upon matter in another County the Plaintiffe may choose in which County to bring his Action except that the Defendant upon generall issue pleaded may be prejudiced of his Triall as if two conspire in one County to Endite one in another County and doe it an Action may be brought in either but if he be indited but not by them there it shall be brought where the conspiracy was If Manasse be made in E. whereby my Tenants recede into L. an Action shall be brought in E. if an action be founded upon two things materiall and traversable in two severall Counties an action may be brought in any of them An Annuity granted in one County to be paid in another the Action shall be brought where the grant was he who is robbed may have an appeale of felony in every County where the goods came but of robbery where the fact was done onely A lease for yeares in one County of Land in another Debt shall be brought where the Lease was made and wast where the Land lyeth every Action which concerneth the life of a man shall be brought where the offence is committed Every issue which ariseth upon an Action in which Land shall be recovered shall be brought where the Land lyeth as in right of ward of Land or body or intrusion of ward and forfeiture of Marriage Valore maritagij and Quare impedit but ravishment of ward where the ravishment was and a Quare non admisit where the refusall was before the Statute of 7. R. 2. c. 10. an Action for Land in diverse Counties or for common in one County appendant to Land in another County shall be brought by severall Writs in both Counties but now In confinio comitatuum a per quae servitia shall be brought where the note of the fine is levyed Sir Miles Corbets case 27. Eliz. in Scaccario fol. 5. REsol That the speciall manner of Common in Norf called Shacke to be taken in arrable land after harvest untill sowing begin is good Resol also if in D. there are fifty acres and in S. 100. l. who ought to intercommon for vicinage D. cannot put in more in their Common then it will depasture and so to escape reciprocally for the originall cause of this Common was onely to prevent suits in Champian Countries Cases upon the Statute of 13. E. 1. of Winchester upon hue and cry Sendills case 27. Eliz. in Com. Banco fol. 6. A Robbery for which the Hundred must answer by force of the said Statute is to be done openly so as the Country may take notice thereof themselves but a Robbery done secretly in the house the Country cannot take notice thereof for every one may keepe his house as strong as he will at his perill For it was adjudged in Ashpoles case that the partie robbed needed not to give notice thereof to the Country For it may be that the partie robbed was bound or maimed c. so as he could not make hue and cry to give notice A robbery was done in January presently after the Sunne setting during day-light and it was adjudged that the Hundred should answer for the same for it was a convenient time for men to travell or to be about their businesse One was killed in the Evening and escaped and by the common Law the Towne was amerced for that was accounted in Law parcell of the day and not of the night But by the Statute 27. El. ca. 13. none shall have action upon the said Statute except the partie robbed so soone as he may give notice of the same to any of the Inhabitants of any Village Towne or Hamlet next to the place where the robbery was done and if they in pursuite apprehend any of the offenders that will excuse the Towne Mibornes case 29. Eliz. in Com. Banco fol. 6. A Robbery was done in the morning ante lucem the Hundred shall not be charged Cum quis felonicè occisus fuit per diem nisi felocaptus fuit tota villata illa amercietur The Earle of Bedfords Case 29. Eliz. fol. 7. 1. REsol If tenant in taile make a voydable lease for yeares and dyeth his heire in ward to the King or other Lord the Lord shall avoyde this lease but if an infant make a feoffment the Lord by Escheate shall not avoyde it but a gardian shall because he doth it in right of the infant 2. This avoidance is but during the interest of the Lord for afterwards the heire may make it good But if he who hath a particular estate avoideth an act in all after his Interest determined it shall not be made good as if a feme be indowed of an appropriation and her clerke inducted the appropriation is defeated for ever so if a feme Covert as a feme sole levy a fine and the Baron enters and dyeth the Con●see shall not have the land for the estate is wholly defeated Vghtreds Case 33. Eliz. fol. 9. THe M. of W. granted the Captainship of a Fort to the plaintiffe and for exercising of the said office and for finding a Master Gunner and six Souldiers granted to him an Annuity of 32. li. per annum the plaintiffe brings an Annuity 1. Except It doth not appeare by the Count that the M. had power to grant this office Non allocatur 2. The plaintiffe doth not averre the exercising of the said office Non allocatur for if he had not used it that shall come in on the other part because this is a condition subsequent and not precedent but if one be to have a thing in consideration of an act to be done by him there he must shew the performance because that amounts to a condition precedent as in debt for salarie but if each party had equall remedy one for the money and the other for the act to be done there the Count shall be without shewing the performance as if one Covenant to serve c. and the other Covenants to give money c. But although that an interest vested is to be devested by non feasance
devise of Land purchased after 2. The statute doth not regard this seck reversion but inheritances of annuall value Resp To the first that this reversion shall hinder the devise by the words of the Statute for he had a reversion of Lands holden but although the Statute saith that he may alien two parts by act executed or will if he alien to one of the three uses by act executed he may devise the reversion for the Statute is to be intended of an intire Alienation and where the Statute saith in reversion or remainder it is to be intended that the devisor be seised of such a remainder which drawes wardship To the second it was answered that things which of their nature are seck are out of the Statute but not things which of their nature are of annuall value but are not of value in respect of some Lease or gift Absque abliquo inde reddendo and therefore seck reversions are devisable by the said Statutes but if they be not yet they shall hinder the devises of other Lands To make one able to devise by those Statutes the time of Having Holding and disposing must concurre and therefore if a grant to the second Sonne here had beene in fee although with power of revocation the devise had been good because he had no Lands In Capite at the time of the devise if the Father conveyeth his Land to the use of his younger Sonne the eldest being within age after the death of his Father he shall be in ward although nothing discend A true Child and not in reputation is within the Statute and if the Sonne purchase Land Bona fide of his Father this is out of the Statute because it is not for his advancement If Tenant in socage devise and after purchase Land in Chivalry the devise is void for a third part but if Tenant in Chivalry and socage devise all and after aliens the Land holden this is good To make division that the King shall have a third part holden the Lands shall be taken according to their value at the time of the death of the Devisor The time of provision that a third part must discend needs not concurre with the time of alienation but it is sufficient that he had it at the time of his death The estate to any of the three purposes ought to continue to the time of death and the Tenure must till after death to make it within the Statute and the estate also of Lands holden ought to continue after death therefore if Tenant in taile in Capite devise socage Land and dye without issue this is good so privity must continue after death therefore if he who made the conveyance be attainted this is out of the Statute The uses to the second Sonne are in contingency and not executed by 27. H. 8. by the power to make Leases and devise reserved to the feoffor and therefore the fee is in the feoffor in the meane time so that having disposed of it and being seised of it he cannot devise the Land purchased after It was Objected that the Statute saith lawfully executed in his life but here no use was to be executed in the second Sonne untill after his death It was Answered that after his death the uses were derived out of the feoffement and so are as it were executed in his life It was holden by the Chiefe Justice that the remainder to the second Sonne is contingent in regard no alienation is found to be made by the Eldest and if there had been then it would be repugnant that after alienation the Land should remaine to the second Sonne and so Quacunq via data the remainder as this Case is cannot vest in him but this point was not resolved by the Court. 2. The revocation is good although the Indenture precedeth the feoffement and that the uses are in contingency and that the revocation is but in part and the Chiefe Justice held that the Eldest Sonne had but a terme determinable and the second an estate taile But in this the Kings Bench and Common pleas differ in Opinion and that if Lands be devised to one and the Heires of his body for 500. yeares the Executors shall have it and not the Heire and the devisee may alien it for it cannot be intailed and so in Peacocks Case 28. Eliz. Banco Regis was it resolved Doctor Leyfields Case 8. Jacobi fol. 88. in Trespasse IN Trespasse for Corne taken at O. C. the Defendant pleads that Q. Eliz. granted the Rectory of O. C. to C. P. without shewing the Letters Patents who demised to G. P. for 8. yeares if the said C. P. so long live and that he as servant of G. P. tooke the Corne and avers the life of C. the Plaintiffe demurreth because the plea amounteth to the generall issue and it was adjudged in the K. Bench that the barre was insufficient because the Defendant shewed not the Letters Patents and Error was brought in the Exchequer-Chamber because the plea amounts to the generall issue because the Defendant gave no colour wherein judgement ought not to be given against the Defendant but onely to answer over 2. Because he is not bound to shew the Letters Patents It was answered that colour shall not be given for colour shall not be given where the plea goeth to the barre of the right for it would be in vaine to give colour of right and to barre him if he had right as if a collaterall warranty fine Statute be pleaded or if he claimes by a waife otherwise where he pleads a discent for this doth not barre the right but the possession he who claimes by sale in a Market overt shall not give colour if he pleads generally but if he pleads that I. S. was possessed as of his owne goods and sold them in a Market overt or waived them there he shall give colour because he confesseth no interest in the Plaintiffe 2. If the Defendant claimes by the Plaintiffe he shall not give colour 3. If the plea be to the Writ or action of the Writ no colour shall be given 4. Colour shall not be given in case of Tithes for to whomsoever the Lands belong the Tithes belong to the Parson 1. Colour ought to be a doubt to the Laygents 2. It must have continuance 3. It must be such a colour that if it be effectuall will maintaine the Action 4. It ought to be given by the first conveyance 2. Resolved Lessee for yeares of Lessee for life of the K. must shew the Letters Patents for he who is privy in estate or interest or who justifieth in right of a Party or privy although he claime but part must shew the first deed and the reason that deeds are shewed to the Court is that the Judges and Jury that which respectively to them belongs shall judge of the sufficiency thereof therefore a deed shall not be suffered to be given in evidence by Witnesses or Copy except it be burned
but of payment of them notwithstanding the mistaking of the conclusion doth not vitiate the Count when the cause to have a prohibition is good 2. The plea of the Defendant to have a prohibition is not good because he traverseth the conclusion Viz. The prescription of discharge where he ought to traverse the prescription of unity for the conclusion is not traversable and because it is matter in Law 3. The issue is not well joyned 1. The matter of discharge is by reason of discharge by the Statute and the issue is by discharge at the common Law 2. In every issue there must be an affirmative and a negative but here is no affirmative for the conclusion is no affirmative but an inference 4. The impropriation is sufficient although the License were generall and the incumbent living for it shall be construed in such a speciall sence that it may take effect and the License is alwayes generall for the incumbent may dye or resigne before the impropriation 5. Admitting the impropriation void it had not beene made good by 35. Eliz. c. 3. for this settles in the K. all possessions of Abbeys with qualification notwithstanding any defect in any surrender c. which intitleth the K. and this defect is not within this qualification but if the impropriation had been good by reputation and so used this had beene given by the Statutes of 27. 31. H. 8. 6. If the Jury found matter to barre the Plaintiffe this is not to be regarded because an attaint lyeth not nor the Witnesses punished for perjury that matter not being materiall to the issue 7. Resolved that perpetuall unity untill the dissolution is by the Statute Prima facie a discharge of payment of Tithes except that the Fermors have paid Tithes and such an unity ought to be Justa aequalis that is fee in one and other Perpetua libera but if the Abbey were founded within time of memory he cannot at all and here it appeareth that the impropriation was made in 20. H. 8. so that it appeareth to the Court that before that the 20. acres were charged with Tythes for of common right all Lands ought to pay Tithes therefore the Chiefe Justice concluded that the said 20. acres as this Case is were chargeable with Tythes but in regard the information is good and the plea Pro consultatione habenda altogether insufficient and the Verdict impertinent to the issue they would not grant a consultation Doctor Grants Case 11. Jacobi Communi Banco fol. 15. In a prohibition 1. REsolved it is a good prescription that every Inhabitant in a Parish have paid 2. s. in the pound of the value of their houses per annum in Lieu of Tithes because it may have a lawfull comencement for it may be that this was so time out of mind for the Lands whereupon the Houses were built as a Modus decimandi 2. That the Parson may sue for it in the Court Christian for that it is in the nature of Tithes and every ancient City and Borough had for the most part such a custome for their Houses for the maintainance of their Parson and obvensions include oblations rents or other revennues and after a consultation was granted Sir Henry Nevills Case 11. Jacobi fol. 17. IT was resolved that a customary Mannor may be holden of another Mannor and there may be Lord Mesne and Tenant of it and such a customary Lord may hold Courts and grant Coppies and such a Mannor shall passe by surrender and admittance and fines shall be paid upon alienation or discent and if it be forfeited the Lord shall have the services as anexed to the Mannor so if Tenant at will c. admit Copy-holders reserving rent this shall goe with the Mannor after the will determined and so note a difference betweene reservations at the common Law and by the custome of the Mannor And it was said that the Mannor of Aylesham in Norfolke is holden by Copy and others in diverse other places And judgement was affirmed in Error Doctor Ayrayes Case 11. Jacobi fol. 18. 14. E 3. the K. Lycensed R. de E. to Found in Oxford a Hall sub nomine aulae Scholarium Reginae de Oxonio in the exemplification 8. Jac. it was Sub nomine aulae Reginae de Oxonio they present to the Church by the name of praeposit Coll. Reginae in Vniversitat Oxonio soci●r Schollar ejusdem the incumbent deviseth the Rectory and they by the name of praeposit Socior Scholar Aulae vel Collegij reginae in Vniversitate Oxonii confirme the demise and notwithstanding these variances it was adjudged that as well the confirmation as the presentation was good and the sole doubtfull variance is that it was Aulae Reginae where it ought to be Aulae Scholarium Reginae but good for the true name of the Colledge is so for the word Scholarium is not necessary but once and if it be taken in construction to come after Aulae the provost will be the sole Corporation by the name of praeposit Aulae Scholar reginae Ergo it doth precede in good construction Also the Founder named it so and so it hath beene alwayes taken and if there be a small variance this is not to the purpose if it be so described that another cannot be meant as a gift Omnibusfilijs I.S. or filiae I.S. when there is but one or if Richerus Abbot of W. grant by the name of Richardus Nil facit error nominis cum de corpore constat and this was the ancient and constant Opinion in Case of Corporations See the Case of the Major and Burgesses of Lin in the tenth Booke Henry Harpurs Case 12. Jacobi fol. 23. IN ejectione firme upon a Lease to J. W. in unam capellam and Land in W. in the Parish of B. and Tithes without shewing the certainty of them the Visne was from B. the Case was Sir H. B. seized of G. of the value of 30 l. per annum and of N. of the annuall value of 18 l. in capite covenanted to stand seized to the use of him and his Wife in taile with remainders in taile the reversion to himselfe and after purchaseth Lands in Socage and deviseth them to be sould by his Executors the matter in Law resolved but no judgement given because diverse exceptions taken c. 1. Resol That if tenant of the King in capite conveyes his Land to one of the uses c. and after purchase Socage he may devise all the Socage 2. A seck revertion upon an estate taile shall hinder the devise of Socage Land for a third part 3. Although the reversion in fee continue in him yet he may devise two parts of the Socage and all if he had granted the reversion over 4. Although he had exercised his power in making a Joynture of more then two parts yet if the reversion in fee had not hindred he might have devised all the Socage purchased after howsoever the
arrerages Page 79 A rent must be paid without an acquittance but not an annuity ib. The Heire is infeoffed by collusion within age the Lord accepteth services he looseth the wardship ib. The Law adjudgeth an escape although the party be in prison Page 80 Vntill the prisoners be delivered to the Sheriffe they are in the custody of the old but if the old dye the new must take notice Page 81 If a prisoner breake Gaole in such Case before the new be made this is no escape for they are in custody of Law ib. A Translation by the K. of a priory into a Deane and Chapter is good by 25. H. 8. Page 82 Notwithstanding a surrender of their Church the Corporation remaineth ib. The Deane and Chapter are to assist the Bishop in two things ib. The Bishop is Patron of all Prebends of common right ib. Originally all Bishopricks were donative by the King ib. If by their surrender to the King the Corporation should be dissolved three inconveniences would follow Page 83 A fine levyed by covin by a Copy-holder barreth not the Lord Page 84 All acts mixt with fraud are tortious and illegall ib. The Judges have construed the Act against the Letter for Salvation of the inheritance of the reversioner Page 85 An averrment of fraud may be taken by 27. Eliz. and so upon 13. Eliz. an averrement may be against a fine upon an usurious contract Page 86 Six Markes of fraud within 13. Eliz. c. 5. Page 87 The Deed must be upon good consideration and Bona fide ib. Directions to make a Deed by one that is indebted unto others Page 87 88 A consideration of nature is not good within this Statute Page 88 Statutes against fraud shall be liberally expounded to suppresse it ib. None but a purchasor for money without fraud shall avoid a faudulent Deed Page 89 The issue in taile is barred after Proclamations made although he claime Page 90 Quod partes finis nihil habuerunt where it is a good plea Page 92 To what purposes the proclamations serve Page 93 Though the issue be beyond the Seas yet he is bound because privy c. ib. THE FOURTH BOOKE VVHere a right to a freehold cannot be barred by acceptance of a collaterall satisfaction Page 95 Wherefore those Branches touching jointures in 27. H. 8. were made Page 96 No estate a good jointure except it take effect presently after his death ib. An estate for life upon condition is a good jointure ib. Where a jointure may be waived ib. Where a d●vise to the Wife for life or in taile c. is a good jointure Page 97 Seisin of fealty is a seisin of all other services Page 98 No distresse excessive for homage fealty escuage c. ib. Seisin of a superior service is seisin of all inferior services incident ib. Doing of homage is a seisin of all services inferior and superior ib. Seisin of one annuall service is not seisin of another Page 98 99 Seisin in Law sufficient to make avowry within 32. H. 8. Page 99 To what services that act doth not extend ib. Writs of Escheate Cessavit and rescons are not within that act Page 100 If a distresse be and nothing arreare the tenant may rescue but he shall not have Trespasse Vi armis against the Lord ib. See the Booke at large where an incroachment is avoidable ib. If a man hath beene out of possession sixty yeares if his entry be not taken away he may enter and bring any possessory Action ib. Actions of Slaunder The Judges must take notice of all statutes which touch the King Page 101 Articles of the good behaviour exhibited against I. S. are no cause for him to bring an Action upon the Case Page 102 A Bill in the Starre-Chamber for Causes examinable there no cause of action otherwise if not examinable there Page 103 No action lyeth upon an appeale of Murder returnable in the Common Bench Page 103 To say to one that he is perjured an Action will lye Page 104 Sermo relatus ad personam intelligi debet de conditione personae Page 105 Two things requisite to have an Action for Slaunder Page 107 Where an Action will lye for Slaundering a mans Title Page 108 109 Verba accipienda sunt in mitiori sensu Page 110 Three things incidents to a Defamation in the Ecclesiasticall Court Page 111 Copy-hold Cases When custome hath created such inheritances their discent shall be according to the rules of Law but not to have collaterall qualities Page 112 The heire before admittance may take the profits and surrender ib. Admittance of a Copy-holder for life inureth to him in remainder but not to prejudice the Lord of his fine Page 114 The heire before admittance may have Trespas ib. One who hath no title maketh voluntary grants they bind not but otherwise it is of admittances upon surrenders or discents Page 116 Quid operatur by severance of the inheritance of the Copy-hold from the Mannor Page 116 117 A release to a disseisor of Copy-hold where it is good Page 118 A Copy-hold is within 32. H. 8. of maintainance and Champerty ib. Copy-holder for a yeare may maintaine an Ejectione firmae ib. Every Mannor comprehends in effect two severall Courts Page 119 The Lord may admit out of the Mannor but not the Steward ib. The Lord cannot exact unreasonable fines Page 121 If the Tenant deny to pay his fine it is a forfeiture Page 122 Sentence against the Wife shall bind the Husband De facto Page 123 A man may surrender to the use of his Wife Page 124 The Lord may retaine a Steward by Parol Page 125 What things are grantable by Copy Page 126 What acts are destructions of Copyholds Page 127 How a custome ought by a Copy-hold to be alleadged Page 128 What things are incident to the Office of Sheriffe Page 129 130 Touching Exposition of the Q grant and where a Non obstante aideth Page 131 What things may he appendant to others Page 132 The Originanall of Common appendant by the Common Law Page 133 That it is apportionable Page 134 See many excellent Cases of Appeales and Indictments and much good matter thereupon from Folio 135. to 143. Touching arrerages of rents and the remedy given for them by 32. H. 8. c. 37. Page 144 The Roll amended according to the speciall verdict Page 146 VVhere a condition or rent shall be suspended ib. The Jury must find matters of estoppell Page 147 An infant admitted by Gardian and no record made of it yet good Page 148 Debt upon a puisne judgement must be paid before Statutes c. ib. Marriage is a countermand of a VVill Page 149 Touching a Lease for life or yeares of Land whereon Trees are growing and what property the Lessee hath in them and of Timber Trees blowne downe with the wind and wast committed in VVindowes VVainscot c. Page 150 151 Touching a recognizance acknowledged before the Chamberlaine of London and of
Execution thereupon by Elegit Page 152 153 How long the Conisee shall hold the Land Page 153 Concerning Deeds inrolled and levying of fines of Land the Common Law preferred before the Statute Law the excellency and antiquity of Records Page 154 155 Rent must be demanded at the place limitted although out of the Land before advantage of a condition taken Page 155 Vpon a Lease by the Q it must be paid at the Exchequer ib. By vertue of a Fieri facias the Sheriffe may sell a Lease but the beginning and ending must be expressed Page 156 If the first benefice be of 8. l. per annum upon acceptance of another with cure the Patron must take notice upon 21. H. 8. c. 13. Page 157 Touching Corporations and their Elections and Ordinances ib. The effect of institution and also of induction and of Letters of dispensation Page 158 Touching Covenants and warranties in Law and when broken Page 159 Touching Strangers occupying Lands without notice of the Devisee Page 160 Goods delivered to one to keep or carry and they are purloyned Page 160 161 Estovers appendant to a house by grant or prescription and when destroyed and of suite to the Lords Milne Page 161 162 Touching reteining of Chaplaines by a Countesse within 21. H. 8. c. 13. Page 162 Of Contracts executory and Actions of the case upon Assumpsit and wager of Law Page 163 An ample and exact explanation of 1. E. 6. c. 14. of Chanteries Page 164 165 Touching reteining Chaplaines and dispensations Page 166 167 That the Lessee shall not alien without License and where a condition may be apportioned Page 167 Concerning Exchanges and what the word Excambium imports and of the warranty thereunto annexed and the nature of it Page 168 Arts done by a man Non compos mentis some binde himselfe and some others and how many sorts of them Page 169 THE FIFTH BOOKE A Lease to begin from henceforth and delivered after when it beginneth Page 171 What power the Bishop hath to make Leases by the private act of 1. Eliz. ib. A Lease of a Faire rendring rent is void by 1. Eliz. Page 172 What rent shall be said to be the true and ancient rent ib. Joint words taken severally in six respects Page 173 A Lease to A. during the life of B. and C. how long it lasteth ib. Therein is a difference betweene a limittation and condition Page 174 An Administrator hath judgement and dyes who shall sue execution thereupon ib. By what act an estate at will is determined ib. By exception of Wood the soile is excepted ib. Acceptance of a new Lease is a surrender of the first Page 175 If the Lessee of Lands may dig for Coles ib. A Lease to A. for his life and the life of B. and C. when it endeth ib. No Action of wast for permissive wast Page 176 Where there is a confidence an Action of the Case for negligence ib. Leases made to the Q. by Colledges Deanes c. are restrained by 13. Eliz Page 177 When a Covenant extends to a thing In esse of the demise it shall bind the Assignee otherwise when to a thing not in essence Page 178 If the thing to be done be meerly collaterall the assignee shall not be charged Page 178 Concessi or demisi import a Covenant Page 179 If any Covenantor breake the Covenant all the Covenantees must joine otherwise when severall interests passe Page 180 A diversity betweene a power and an authority ib. The Covenantee himselfe cannot devise the assurance ib. The Counsell must be given to the Purchasor Page 181 An Indenture void without a manuall act of indenting ib. Where a Condition or Covenant once broken may be salved after Page 181 A condition of two parts and both possible and one becometh impossible Page 182 An estate to be made at the costs of the Covenantee the Covenantor must doe the first act i. give notice what assurance he will have ib. The Seale of one Covenantor is broken it is void against him onely Page 182 183 A. is bound to give such a release as by the Judge of c A. must procure him Page 183 Terror of Suite is a damification upon a Counterbond ib. An action for reparations lyeth against the assignee Page 184 What interest is assignable over Page 185 Where an Indenture precedent to declare uses is only directory Page 186 Where an averment may be against a matter in writing Page 187 Cases of Executors Where a release by an Infant Executor is a barre Page 188 An Executor may release before probate but not have an action ib. A judgement for Debt shall be paid before a Statute Page 188 189 Administration during minority ceaseth at 17. yeares of age Page 189 Such an administration may not sell goods but for necessity ib. Where an administration is void and where voidable ib. Where an Executor of his owne wrong may retaine goods Page 190 An action against an Executor or by him where it must be in the Debet and where in the Detinet tantum ib. What retorne the Sheriffe must make upon a Devastavit Page 191 Administrator brings Debt barred because Executor ib. What act maketh a man Executor of his owne wrong ib. Constructions of the Statutes of Jeofails c. Amendment of Records Fines c. In Trespasse the nature of the Fishes must be shewed Page 192 Where a Debt against Baron Feme must be in the Debet Page 193 An ejectment of Lands out of A. B. and C. tried by a visne out of A. onely it is insufficient ib. 23. Jurors are returned and 12. appeare and find for the Plaintiffe it is good ib. Variance betweene the Writ and Count is not aided by 18. Eliz. ib. Five parts of a fine and where the Conisor may assigne Error Page 194 A common recovery not like other assurances more favoured Page 195 A pannell is annexed to the Venire facias without returne not good ib. A difference where a man is misnamed in the Venire and where in the pannell Page 196 Issue joined upon a point not materiall aided by the Statute ib. An amendment good after the transcript removed Page 196 197 Error in the Originall matter of Substance Page 197 A writ of Covenant upon a fine dated after the returne is there amendable but not in other actions ib. A common recovery taken by intendment Page 197 198 Cases of Pardons When a Writ shall be said to be depending Page 198 VVhere an Amerciament is pardoned the Statutes of Jeofailes extend to VVALES Page 199 Debts to the Q are excepted but not Originally due to the Subject ib. VVhere the K. may pardon corporall punishment Page 200 The K. may pardon the Suite in the Court Christian but not costs ib. An Office of intitling but not of Instruction may be under the great Seale Page 201 VVhere the rents are severall and where joint and where the Patentee of part may take advantage of a condition Page 202 A
grant after Office and before the retorne is good ib. The Bishop must shew the cause of refusing a Clerke Page 203 The Constable may bring an Offendor to what Justice he will ib. Vpon refusall to find surety the Constable may commit him ib. Where a man shall avoid a fraudulent deed by 27. Eliz. Page 204 The Defendant pleads another Action depending for the same Page 205 Cases of By-laws Where the Inhabitants of a Towne may make By-laws and where the consent of the greater part shall bind all ib. Who are liable towards the repaires of a Church Page 207 Against a devise of Lands by writing no averrment can be received Page 208 Cases of Usury What manner of contract is Vsury Page 208 209 A demurrer is a confession of all matters in fact well pleaded Page 208 What things may be released before the day Page 209 Daggs Pistolls c. are within the Statute of 33. H. 8. c. 6. ib. The Sheriffe or his officers may carry Weapons invasive or defensive ib. One man cannot have an Action for a common nusance Page 210 If an Orphan sue for goods in the Court Christian a prohibition lyeth ib. A Deed shewed in Court remaineth there all that Terme Page 211 In the K. B. imparlances in barre are entered but not to reply ib. The Wife Tenant for life dyes the Baron is not liable for wast ib. When amends may be tendered after a distresse but not after impounding tender to the Bailiffe is not good Page 212 The Plaintiffe may pray a Deed to be entered In haec verba the same Tearme but not after ib. An action of wast lies after the death of him in remainder for life ib. Every assignee of every Lessee mediate or immediate is within 11. H. 6. c. 5. Page 213 An award must be certaine and binds none but parties Page 214 A prescription for common where it is good ib. Where a warrāty comenceth by disseissin Page 214 215 A confirmation of the Land and of the terme a diversity Page 215 Cases of Customes Where a custome binds Strangers Page 216 Where property is altered by sale in a Market Overt ib. A custome which addeth more solemnity to the Law is good ib. Who shall have the Corne upon the ground Page 216 217 Where judgement finall shall be given in Wales Page 217 Cases of Executions One in execution escapeth yet the other is liable Page 218 VVhere the Defendant is in Execution for the King he shall be also for the Plaintiffe Page 219 If a Man be in custody and another VVrit commeth to the Sheriffe he is in custody of force of the second VVrit also Page 220 A judiciall VVrit needs no returne but not so of an Elegit ib. VVhere restitution shall be after reversall of Outlarly or judgement Page 221 VVhere the Sheriffe may breake the House to make Execution Page 222 That a House is not a defence of Strangers ib. A false consideration is void as to the Queene Page 223 224 The Law findeth not an assignee in Law where one in Fact Page 224 Foure bring a Quare impedit and one releaseth it barreth onely him ib. After a Divorce issue by the second Husband legitimate Page 225 False evidence to the Grand Inquest is not within 5 Eliz. ib. Commissioners of Sewers must tax all who are in danger ib. A Quod permittat for a Nusance where it lyeth without request Page 226 227 And where against a Feoffee or assignee Page 227 Two have Title to present by turne one presents I. S. who is deprived or Merè laicus it is a turne not if the admission be void ib. Vterque taken sometimes discretive sometimes collective Page 228 The Plaintiffe cannot refuse to joine in demurrer but the King may ib. A man cannot have an Action for damage by Coines ib. None may erect a Dovehouse but the Lord of a Mannor ib. Ancient demesne is a good plea in Ejectione sirmae not in Trespasse Page 229 Excellent diversity of Learning touching Wrecke ib. When the high Admirall shall have jurisdiction Page 230 Plentifull matter touching goods wayved goods of Fellons Deodands c. Page 231 What things may be gained by usage without matter of Record ib. Rendring rent to one and his heires and to one or his heires is all one Page 232 The King by his Proclamation may make forreigne Coine currant ib. A Tender of money in bagges is a good tender Page 233 In a writ of Estrepement the Sheriffe may take posse com ib. Estrepement lyeth in wast as well before judgment as after ib. Feme Copiholder durante viduitate soweth the Lord shall have it ib. Payment of parcell before the day is satisfaction for all Page 234 Grantee of a remainder liable for arreares of a rent charge ib. Debt against one joint obligor hee cannot plead Non est factum Page 235 But hee may if the deed become void by matter Ex-post facto ib. In Indictments certainty to a certaine in generall is good ib. False Latine shall not quash an Indictment ib. In Indictments of death Percussit must be except in case of poisoning Page 236 A lense for yeares is an interest within 4 H. 7. c. 25. ib. A libell may be as well against a private man as a Magistrate ib. Non refert whether it be true or the party of good fame ib. If a man finde a Libell advise how to to preserve himselfe Page 237 Gardian in chivalrie shall have the single value of the marriage without Tender ib. The great Case De jure regis Ecclesiastico upon the Statutes of 1 Eliz. c. 1. p. 2. Touching a Deprivation by the Bishop and the Kings supremacy in Causes Ecclesiasticall Page 237 238 THE SIXTH BOOKE VVHere services shall be multiplyed apportioned or extinct Page 239 Where the parole shall demurre for nonage of the demandant and where the Tenant shall have his age much good learning Page 240 The King grants the tenancy by attainder the mesnalty is revived Page 241 The K. grants land Tenendum by a rose pro omnibus c. what Tenure Page 242 Resolutions and Diversities when a barre in one action shall be a barre in another ib. Where a Writt shall be brought by Journeyes accounts Page 243 Who are Judges in Inferiour Courts Page 244 Jointenants cannot make partition by words after 28. H. 8. c. 1. ib. A Parson deprived for Adultery which is pardoned he is restored Page 245 A Visne must be from the most certain place ib. Tenant for life and hee in remainder joyne in a lease how it inureth Page 246 Riens passa tryed where the land is not where the patent dated ib. A devise to his brother paying 20. s. he hath fee ib. A devise to Baron and Feme and their children what estate it is Page 247 Where the will is directory and where declaratory without reference to power ib. A diversity betweene a suite by Citation and an Appeale Page 248 If a Statute speaks
lyeth against Executors for the Testators Debt Page 352 VVhere a man may wage his Law Page 353 VVhat words shall be adjudged a good consideration Page 354 VVhat Offices grantable for yeares and by what Acts Offices may be forfeited and where the King may seise without Scire facias Page 355 356 Copy-hold estates are within 4. H. 7. of fines Page 356 Disseissor of Copy-hold levyes a fine what time the Lord hath ib. VVho may enter without command to avoid a fine Page 356 357 A plea by an administratrix of fully administred must be certeine Page 358 VVhere an Allegation generally of Covin is good ib. A commoner Copy-holder may have an Action of the Case for the losse of his Common so he may distreine damage feasant ib. A Baron of Scotland shall be tried by Commons of England Page 359 See the diverse Resolutions of difficulties arising upon the Indictment of the Lord Sanchar and others Page 359 360 Cases in the Court of Wards The Kings release doth not extinguish a service inseparable Page 361 VVhen the Land moveth from a Subject and the Tenure is changed the new Tenure shall be as neere the ancient as may be ib. VVhere the particular estate is out of 32. H. 8. no wardship accrueth to the King by advancement of him in remainder otherwise of a reversion for he is Tenant Page 362 VVhat words are sufficient to create an estate taile Page 363 The Kings possibility shall not devest a VVardship vested Page 364 The reviving of an ancient Tenure preferred before the reservation of a new ib. By death of the father before livery sued after tender The King looseth primer seisin but no meane rates Page 365 Of a fruitlesse reversion a wardship but not primer seisin ib. Where the saving in 32. H. 8. giveth ward and primer seisin Page 366 A Mensnalty cannot be suspended in part and in esse for part by the act of the party but it may by Act of Law or a third person ib. There are foure manner of Avowries Page 367 What Act is a good delivery of a Deed or of seisin of Land ib. One may have an estate taile which cannot discend Page 368 Three manner of Confirmations Page 369 THE TENTH BOOKE WHat things requisite to the Founding of an Hospitall see at large Page 371 An estate taile barred by recovery in value without recompence Page 374 A Feme Covert shall not loose her Land by any conclusion without examination upon a Writ in Court ib. Tenant for life suffers a recovery and he in remainder in taile is vouched the reversion in fee is barred Page 375 The devise of a terme to one for life the remainder to another for life is good as an Executory devise Page 376 The first Devisee cannot barre him who hath the Executory devise ib. Assent to the first devise is an assent for all ib. Such an executory devise not grantable over ib. but it may be extinguished by release to the first Devisee ib. Qui destruit medium destruit finem Page 377 If a Recusant grant the next avoidance before conviction it is void by 3. Jacobi for he is disabled from the beginning of the Session c. Page 378 Covin shall not be presumed if it be not averred ib. A private Act shall be taken as it is Pleaded ib. What grants of Offices by a Bishop are void by 1. Eliz. except for twenty one yeares or three lives and what Circumstances requisite Page 380 Praerogativa Regis c. 15. excepts Knights fees and advowsons and indowments all other appendants now passe by grants and so doe they in Case of Restitution Page 381 A Corporation aggregate may make a surrender in Law not in Deed Page 382 The Jurisdiction of the Marshalsea and the reasons thereof Page 382 383 About 4. E. 3. the Court of Kings Bench became resident Page 383 A good diversity where the Court hath Jurisdiction but proceed In verso ordine and where they have not Jurisdiction there all they doe is Coram non judice and void Page 383 384 Diverse abstruse points resolved some at the common Law and severall upon the Statutes of 32. 34 H. 8. of wills Page 385 386 VVhat Colour is and where it must be given Page 388 VVhere a privy interest although he claime but part must shew the first Deed except he claim meerly by Law Page 388 389 VVhere a man may have a freehold discendible Page 390 A warranty barres no estate which is not displaced at the time of c. ib. A warranty cannot inlarge an estate where it may be given in evidence Page 391 VVhat Obligations made to Sheriffes are within the Statute of 23. H. 6. Page 391 Forma verbalis Forma legalis or Essentialis Page 392 393 The time of granting a Tales and when it is well granted Page 396 397 The proper place of a reservation is after limitation of the estate Page 397 Increase of services is betweene very Lord and very Tenant Page 398 VVhen Lands shall be said to be concealed from the K. 398 399 A man shall have costs in all cases where hee recover dammages Page 400 Where a man shall recover damages and costs also ib. Where to the writ of Inquiry and to the verdict and judgement ib. Where insufficient verdict may be supplyed by a writ of Inquiry and where it cannot a good difference Page 401 A difference between auncient Corporations and new in matter of Misnosmer Apices Juris non sunt Jura Page 401 402 Which is the legall time of payment of Rent Page 402 If payment be in the morning and the lessor dye at noone this is satisfactory against the heire but not against the King ib. Where the lessee shall hold rent free for a quarter Page 402 Where Damages may be assessed intirely and where not Page 403 404 What words passe under the name of Latine Page 404 Where by death of one of the Plaintiffes after summons and severance the writ abateth divers good diversities Page 404 405 A Qu. impedit praesentare ad medietatem Ecclesiae where good ib. Cases upon the Commissions of Sewers Where the Commissioners may subvert a Cawsey and where not Page 406 If a wall be subverted by a sodaine inundation the Commissioners may taxe all equally who have damage thereby ib. Otherwise if it come by neglect of him who ought to doe it ib. If the Commissioners have power to make a new River and a generall taxe so much upon every Towne for doing thereof Page 407 What is a good revocation of old uses and limitation of new Page 409 THE ELEVENTH BOOK A Difference between a disability absolute and temporary or personall Page 411 The grant of the office of Auditor to two is good Page 412 What offices grantable in reversion ib. Where the Jurors may assesse damages severally Page 413 Where one shall have an attaint that is a stranger to the issue ib. Where a writ of Enquiry shall issue Page 414 The plaintiffe shall have judgement de melioribus damnis ib. The conclusion of a plea is not traversable Page 415 In every issue there must be an affirmative and a negative ib. The Impropriation sufficient in the life of the Incumbent ib. VVhere the witnesses are not punishable for perjury Page 416 Perpetuall unity a discharge and what requisite thereunto ib. VVhat prescription for tithes of houses is good ib. A customary Mannor may be holden of another Mannor Page 417 VVhat variance in the name of a Corporation doth vitiate Page 418 VVhat devise of socage by tenant is Capite is good Page 419 An Ejectione firmae of tithes without shewing their kinds not good ib. If a deed be rased the obligor may plead Non est factum Page 420 A diversity where it is rased by the obligee himselfe and where by another ib. VVhere Clergy allowable at the Common law and where at this day copious and excellent matter Page 421 VVhere an Errour lyeth not before the finall Judgement Page 423 A fine by the Stewart of a Mannor where it is well assessed Page 425 VVhere the Lord may destreine for it without prescription ib. VVhere an action shall abate in part and where for the whole Page 426 Notwithstanding the exception trees remaine parcell of the Inheritance ib. A thing in possession cannot be parcell of a reversion upon an estate for life Page 427 None may be prohibited by the common law to use any trade Page 428 An ordinance by a Corporation against law is void ib. How an Ejectione firmae must be brought Page 429 Although the dammages are not well assessed yet the Plaintiffe may have judgement ib. Much variety of Learning touching Recusancy and upon the severall Statutes concerning them Page 429 430 Master and Fellowes of a Colledge restrained to grant by 13. Eliz. what statutes doe binde the King Page 432 Some grants to the King void and some voidable Page 433 VVhere acceptance of Rent doth barre and where not Page 434 Tenant in taile after possibility of c. hath a greater estate in quality then tenant for life not in quantity Page 434 435 VVhat priviledges belong to his estate Page 435 A lease without impeachment of wast what passeth thereby ib. A monopoly is against law and hath three incidents against the weale publique Page 436 What fees belong to the office of Master of the Ordnance Page 427 In the Kings Case the law maketh a privity to be accomptable ib. For what causes a Citizen may be disfranchised Page 438 The 3. Book fol. 9. Dowties Case A Difference where the first certainty is false in a grant and where the first is true and the second false Page 439 Where lands are in the Q. by 33. H. 8. c. 20. without seisure ib. Fol. 11. Sir William Harberts Case What remedy for debts at the common law and when the body and lands became liable thereunto Page 440 44● In all actions vi et armis the body was subject unto Imprisonment and so for debt at the Kings suite Page 441 The heirs of the con●is●ser shall not have contribution against a purchasor ib. Changes reall doe not survive but personall doe Page 442 Three Errours there moved but not resolved ib. FINIS
a restraint against any particular person in certeine Vpon a Feoffement without warranty the Feoffee shall have all the Charters which comprize warranty and others though they be not given to him because hee is to defend the Title at his perill Upon a Feoffement with warranty without expresse grant the Feoffee shall not have any Charters which serve for to deraigne the warranty paramount Also the Feoffer shall have all Charters which serve for maintenance of the Title but the Feoffee shall have all which maintaine the possession as Court Rolls and which are concomitant and incident to the possession If A. be seized of a Segniorie rent advowson or other thing that lyeth in grant and grant the same over unto B. with warranty and B. grant that to C. with warranty In this case C. shall have the first deed although B. be bound to warrantie for without that he cannot make any Defence against A. or any claiming by him Pelhams Case 32. El. fo 14. A Tenant for life the remainder in Taile the remainder in fee bargaines and sells the Land to one who before the Statute of 14. El. ca. 8. suffers a recoverie in which A. is vouched and voucheth over and he in remainder enters and the entry is adjudged lawfull for the Recovery is a Forfeiture and the remainder may enter for it is the common Assurance As if Tenant for life had levied a Fine c. and suing of execution doth not toll the entry of the remainder and a Writ of error was sued and the plaintiffe release the errors Porters Case 35. El. fo 22. 32. H. 8. P. devised a house to his wife and her heires upon condition that she by advise c. with all convenient speed after his death should assure it c. for maintenance of a Free School c. for ever and dyes 32. H. 8. the wife enters and 3. E. 6. leases to A. for yeares the heire of P. enters and his entry adjudged lawfull because 23. H. 8. extends not to good uses nor doth it make the conveyance voyd or give entry but makes the use voyd and admit the use voyd yet the condition is not for Counsell may devise c. as to have a Corporation by Pattent and licence to assure and therefore the wife ought to have performed it Any man at this day may give Lands Tenements or hereditaments to any person or persons for the finding of a Preacher maintenance of a Schoole maimed Soulders poore people reparation of Churches High-wayes Bridges marriage of poore maids or any other charitable uses But it is good policy in every such Feoffment or estate to reserve to the Feoffor and his heires any small rent or to expresse some small summe of money for the consideration of the cause before recited Altonwoods Case 42. Eliz. fo 41. H. 8. seised of an estate Taile to him and the heires males of his body and of a Fee expectant grants in Taile and dyes without issue male adjuded that the grant is voyd for the King had an estate Taile in possession by which he might grant a lawfull estate for his own life and a Fee by which he might grant an estate Taile by speciall recitall And these words ex speciali gratia c. shall not produce a strainable construction against the rules of Law or in deceptionem regis Capells Case 23. Eliz. fo 62. A Tenant in Taile the remainder to B. in Taile B. grants a rent charge A. suffers a common recovery and dyes without issue the grantee distraines the Alienee of A. brings a Replevin adjudged for the alienee by all the Justices of England that a common recoverie against a Tenant in Tayle shall binde not onely the remainder and all Leases charges c. granted or made by him in remainder but also the Reversion and all Leases charges c. granted by him in reversion Archers Case 39. 40. Eliz. fo 66. LAnd was devised to the Father for life the remainder to the next heire male of the Father and to the heires males of his body the devisor dyes the Father infeoffes J. S. with warranty First it was resolved by Anderson and Walmeslowe et tot Cur. that the Father had but onely an estate for life for that he had an expresse estate for life demised unto him and the remainder is limitted to his next heire male in the singular number and his right heire male may not enter for the forfeiture in his life for he cannot be heire so long as he liveth Secondly It was resolved that the remainder to his right heire is a good remainder although he cannot have a right heire during his life but it sufficeth that it vesteth eo instanti that the particular estate determineth Dyer 14. Eliz. fo 309. Thirdly it was resolved which was the principall poynt in this case per tot Curiam that by the Feoffment of the Tenant for life the remainder was destroyed for every contingent remainder ought to vest either during the particular estate or at the least eo instanti that the particular estate determineth for if the particular estate be ended or determined in Deed or in Law before the contingency fall the remainder is voyd And in this case by the Feoffment of the Father his estate for life was determined by condition in Law which cannot be revived by any possibilitie for this cause the contingent remainder is voyd for by the Feoffment no right of the particular estate remaineth and the better opinion was that the warranty bindes the remainder though in Abeyance Bredons Case 39 40. Eliz Fol. 76. TEnant for life and the remainder in Taile joyne in a fine Come ceo c. to A. who renders a Rent charge of 40. l. a yeare to Tenant for life the remainder dies without issue the second remainder in taile enters Tenant for life distraines for the Rent adjudged he may and that the rent remaines after the death of Tenant in taile without issue during the life of Tenant for life the fine was no discontinuance for every one gave that which he might lawfully give and t is no forfeiture by Tenant for life for the Law construes this First to be a grant of him in remainder and after the grant of Tenant for life Vt res magis valeat c. If Tenant for life and the first remainder in Taile make a feoffement t is no discontinuance though the first remainder in taile dies without issue nor is it a forfeiture but the feoffee shall hold it during the life of Tenant for life but if it be without deed then t is a surrender of Tenant for life and the feoffement of the remainder Vt res magis valeat c. Corbets Case 42. Eliz Fol. 84. of Perpetuities C. Covenants to stand seised to the use of himselfe for life and after to the use of A. his Eldest Son and the Heires Males of his body the remainder to the use of B. his second Son and the
dyes after R. enters and dyes 18. Eliz. the executor of T. enters and assignes to J. S. the Successor of the Rector enters and Leases to B. who upon ouster brought an Ej. Firmae Resolved for the Plaintiffe and that the Lease to T. is voyd Argued for T. that his demise was good and a difference taken betwixt terminum annorum and tempus annorum as in this case of the demise to T. during so many yeares of the fourescore yeares c. not of the terme of fourescore yeares if a Lease be made for 21. yeares and after another Lease to commence from the end and expiration of the said terme of yeares and after the first Lease is surrendered the second terme shall commence presently not so if it were from the end of the said 21. yeares Resolved that the demises to R. and W. are voyd because the terme that El. had was sub modo if she should so long live which is determined by her death ergo no residue can remaine to R. and W. and so 't was adjudged between Greene and Edwards and the Court agreed the diversity betwixt the demises to R. and W. and the demise to T. 't was argued that the demise to T. was voyd 1. Because that the Lessor had not power for to contract for the land during the fourescore yeares for he had but a possibility to have the land againe during the fourescore yeares viz. if El. dyed which possibility cannot be demised but the Court delivered no opinion to this poynt 2. That the Lease to T. was voyd for the incertainty how many yeares should be behinde at the death of El. a termor grants to B. so many yeares as shall be behinde tempore mortis suae 't is voyd Locrofts case adjudged a man possessed of a terme of 90. yeares upon marriage of his Sonne demised the land to his Sonne for 70. yeares to commence after his death the Lessor dyes the lease was adjudged good because here he demised the land for 70. yeares which is certaine in which this differs from 7. E. 6. which diversity was agreed by the whole Court 3. That 't was voyd because he dyed in the life of El. so that the incertainty cannot be reduced to a certainty in his life time and so cannot rest in the executors a lease to one for so many yeares as his Executors shall name is voyd Note a diversity betwixt a covenant and agreement which is perfect and certaine though it takes effect in possession upon a future matter precedent and a covenant and agreement incertaine which is to be reduced to a certainty by matter ex post facto for in the first case the estate is bound presently in the other not which was agreed by the Court. 4. It was moved if T. had been in life the demise could not rest in him T. dyed before R. or W. and R. survived El. and by the expresse condition precedent R. could not take except El. dyed within the terme and W. could not take except R. dyed within the terme and this is as much as to say that if R. dyes before El. and T. cannot take except W. dye in the life of El. and R. survived El. So that both precedent contingencies faile viz. the death of R. and W. in the life of El. and though the demise to R. and W. are voyd yet the limitation precedent viz. the death of R. and W. in the life of El. to the demise to T. is not voyd for his interest may depend upon both the contingencies for so was the intention of the parties and this was affirmed by the whole Court by Popham Chiefe Justice The Lease to T. was voyd for another cause for it cannot commence upon a contingent which depends upon another contingent as here the demise to T. depends upon the contingent annexed to the demise made to W. and the demise to W. depends upon a contingency annexed to the demise to R. Digges Case 42. Eliz. fo 173. C. Digges was seised of the land in question and other lands in fee and by Indenture 6. Maij. 10. of the Queene covenanted in consideration of marriage betwixt him and his wife and for the advancement of T. their Sonne and for two hundred pounds paid to him before marriage that he and his heires would stand seised to the use of himselfe for life and after to T. in taile and after to the use of himselfe in taile with a proviso for the considerations aforesaid c. that it should be lawfull for him at any time during his life with consent of certaine persons by Indenture to be Inrolled in any of the Kings Courts to revoke any of the uses or estates and for to limit new uses 6. Maij. 12. of the Queene C. by consent c. by Indenture inrolled in the Chancery revoked the uses and estates aforesaid in part of the land and limitted the use of it to him and his heires after 20. Sept. 13. of the Queene by Indenture with consent c. inrolled in Banck M. 13. 14. of the Queene declared that for the payment of his debts that from the time of the inrollment of this Deed in Chancery all the uses in the first Indenture should be voyd and that the land should be to the use of himselfe in fee after C. 26. Octob. 14. of the Queene by Indenture covenanted for to levie a Fine of all his land part of which should be to the use of himselfe and his wife and his heires which Fine was levied the same terme after the Indenture dated 20. Sept. was inrolled in Chancery after C. enters and makes his claime and whether C. dyed seised in fee of the land mentioned in the Deed of Revocation of 20. Sept. was the question Adjudged 1. that C. D. might revoke part at one time part at another till he hath revoked all but he can revoke the same part but once except that he hath a new power c. to uses newly limitted for these words at any time amount to from time to time c. 2 That where the revocation is to be by Deed Indented to be inrolled this is as much as to say as by Deed Indented and inrolled and till inrollment no revocation shall be for otherwise perchance none shall be inrolled 3. That 't was no perfect revocation by the Indenture of 20. Sept. till the Deed were inrolled in the Chancery for though that the proviso of revocation in the first Indenture shall be satisfied with an inrollment in any of the Kings Courts yet for that the Indenture of revocation it selfe limits the revocation to take effect after the inrollment in Chancery it ought to be so 4. That the Fine levied before the inrollment in Chancery which was before the revocation hath extinct the power see Albaines case before adjudged and Popham Chiefe Justice said that without question such a power might be released for 't is not meerely collaterall but savours and tastes of
house or not When a man maketh a feoffment of a Messuage cum pertinentii he departeth with nothing thereby but that which is parcell of the house as buildings curtelage and gardens If a Lessee for yeares makes a Lease for a certaine Tearme of any parcell and so divides the possession thereof from the residue if of this parcell so severed Liverie be made the possession in the residue by the first lessee is not any impediment to the liverie of this parcell otherwise if a Lessee make a Lease at will of any parcell there his possession of the residue shall hinder the liverie made in this parcell and with this judgement agreed all the other Justices and Serjeants of Serjeants Inne in Fleete-streete Doddingtons Case 27. Eliz. fo 32. KIng H. 8. Ex certa scientia c. granted to A. for 300 l. Omnia illa Messuagia in tenura Johannis Browne Scituate in Well nuper prioratini de W. Spectant ' And in truth the Lands lie in D. in this Case 't was resolved that the grant was voide by the Common Law as well in case of a common person as the King because the grant is generall and is restrained to one certaine Village and the grantee shall not have any Lands out of that Village to which the generallity of the grant is referred for this Pronoune Illa hath his necessary reference as well to the Towne as well as to the Tenure of I. B. for if eyther the one or the other faile the grant is voide And so it was adjudged Per tot cur de Banco Regis Resolved also that this grant was not holpen by the Statute of 34. H. 8. For no grants are holpen by this Statute nor by any act of confirmation but such as comprehend convenient certainty 1. Quia generale nihil certum implicat And here no Tenements are mentioned to be granted because the generall grant being intire was referred to a falsity and therefore it cannot be said that the Towne was misnamed and great inconvenience would follow if c. for the King should be deceived but the Statute helpes when there is a convenient certainty as a Mannor Farme Land knowne by a certaine name or containing so many Acres c. So that it may appeare what things the King intended to passe Note t is the most sure way for the Pattentee to expresse as much as he can in certainty before the generall words SIR Rowland Heywards Case In cur Wardor 37. Eliz. fo 35. SIr Rowland Heyward seised of a Mannor in Demeans and rents in consideration of money doth demise grant Bargaine and sell to A. the said Mannours Lands Tenements and the reversions and remainders with all Rents reserved upon any demise to have and to hold to A. and his asignes after the death of the Lessor for seaventeene yeares rendring a rose the Indenture was inrolled and after the Lessor by Indenture doth Covenant with B. to stand seised of the premises to the use of himselfe and the Heires of his body and no attornment was made to A. The Question was What passed to A and it was resolved by Popham and Anderson chiefe Justices and the Court that A. may have his election eyther to take the same by demise at the common Law or by bargaine and Sale Per Statutum 27. H. 8. without attornment for it was one entire demise and bargaine of one Mannor without any fraction or division thereof and this election remaineth to A. and his Executors and assignes for here is not Election to claime one of two severall things by one Title but to claime one thing by one of the two severall Titles for where the things are severall nothing passeth before Election and the Election must precede but when one thing passeth the Election of the Title may be subsequent For if I. have 3 Horses and doe give to you one of them the property comenceth by Election and must be made in the life of the Parties The Bi of Sarum had a great wood of 1000 Acres called Brerewood and infeoffed another of one House and seaventeene Acres parcell of the Wood and made Liverie in the Wood House nothing passeth of the Wood before Election and the Heire of the feoffee may not make Election Bullocks Case 10. Eliz. Dyer In case where election is given of two several things he which is the primer Agent and that ought to doe the first act shall have alwayes the Election As if a man grant a Rent of twenty Shillings or a Robe the Grantor shall have the Election for he is the primer Agent eyther by paying the one or delivering the other If a man make a Lease rendring twenty shillings or a Robe the Lessee shall have the Election Causa qua supra but if I give unto you one of my Horses in my Stable there you shall have the Election for you are the Primer Agent by taking or seising one of them and so of twenty trees in my Wood. Note for Elections these diversities 1. When nothing passes to the grantee c. before Election there it ought to be made in the life of the Parties but when the Estate passes presently c. the Grantee c his Heire or Executor may elect 2. When the same thing passes and the Donee c. hath Election in what manner c. he will take it the Donee Heire or Executor may elect 3. When Election is given to severall persons the first shall stand 4. When Election is given of two severall things he which ought to doe the first Act shall have Election 5. When the thing granted is annuall and to have continuance there the Election remaines to the Grantor in case where the Law gives him Election as well after the day as before otherwise t is when the thing is to be performed Vnica vice 6. The feoffee c. by his act may forfeit his Election as if A. infeoffe B. of two Acres Habendum the one for life the other in Taile and hee before Election makes a feoffement of both here the feoffor shall enter in which he pleases for the wrong of the feoffee 7. Though the Lessees here enter generally yet they may Elect after so if one be Executor and Devisee of a terme and enters generally c. and after the Lessees in the principall case made Election for to take by bargaine and Sale and had the Rents The Bishop of Winchesters Case 38. El. fo 43. In a prohibition REsolved that at common Law none had capacity to take Tythes but spirituall persons or Persona mixta as the King and regularly no meere Lay man was capable of them except in speciall Cases for he could not sue for them in Court Christian and regularly a lay man had no remedy for them till 32 H. 8. A Lay-Man may be discharged of Tythes at the common Law by grant or by composition but not by prescription for it is commonly said in our Law-Books that a lay man may
accordingly and if no request be made and the Feoffee or Grantee that ought to performe the condition dye the condition is broken Yet this generall rule admits an exception for here in case of an advowson he hath not time during his life though no request be made but upon contingency to wit if no avoydance fallin the meane time for if the Grantee stay till the avoydance fall Ipso facto the condition is broken for B. cannot have all the presentations during his life which was the effect of the grant and the Advowson is come into another plight then t was But where the day is certaine for the performance and the party dye before the condition is discharged because the performance is become impossible by the Act of God and therefore when a day certaine is appointed t is good that the Heire of the feoffee be named in the condition Another diversity was also agreed when t is to be performed to a stranger he ought to request the stranger in convenient time for to limit a time when it shall be done but if it be to the Feoffor himselfe he ought not to performe it before request Another diversity was taken by some when the feoffee dyes and when the feoffor dyes for in the one case the condition is broken in the other not Binghams Case 43. of the Queene fo 91. R. Bingham the Grandfather held the Mannor of B. M. of Sir Jo Horseley as of his Mannor of H. and levyed a fine to the use of him and his Wife for life and after of R. the Father his Sonne and Heire in taile and after to the right Heires of the Grand father R. the Father dyed the remainder in taile discended to R. his Sonne within age Sir I. H. suffered a recovery of the Mannor of H. to the use of himselfe and his Wife in taile and after to Sir R. H. his Sonne and Heire in taile after to the Heires of Sir I. Sir I. and his Wife dyed without issue Sir R. enters R. B. the Grandfather dyes by which the reversion in Fee discended to R. B. the Wife of Robert dyes R. within age enters and Leases c. Resolved that the use limitted to the right Heires of the Grandfather upon the fine is a reversion in the Grandfather expectant upon the taile not a Remainder so t was resolved in Fenwick and Mitfords Case and so t was resolved in the Earle of Bedfords Case Resolved that Sir R. H. shall not have the ward of the Land for the reversion in Fee is holden of him and not the Taile though both discend from the same Ancestor for the taile cannot be drowned and if Tenant in taile grant over the reversion he shall hold the Taile of his Grantee and though the Seigniory of the taile be suspended yet the Donee hath two distinct estates and the reversion is as a Mesne betwixt the Donee and the Lord and the Lord is not defeated for the Law gives no wardship in such cases and if it were admitted that by the unity of Tenure betwixt the Donee and reversion t was determined yet nothing shall be holden of the Lord but the reversion and in some cases the Donee in taile shall hold of no body as a gift in taile the remainder to the King Resolved if the Grandfather were Tenant for life the remainder to the Father in taile the remainder to the Father in fee the Father dyes his Heire within age and Sir I. H. grants the Seigniory to Sir R. H. and the Grandfather dyes that Sir R. H. shall not have the ward of the Heire because R. the Father did not hold of him nor any of his Ancestors the day of his death nor the Taile was not within the see and Seignory of Sir Ra. or any of his Ancestors at the death of R. the Father and the Writ saith Praecipe c. Eo quod terram illam de eo tenuit die quo obijt And though that during the life of Tenant for life the Heire of the remainder shall not be in ward because Tenant for life is Tenant to the Lord yet the death of Tenant for life is not the cause of ward but the removing of an impediment as in Paget and Caries Case Tenant for life commits wast and after Tenant for life in remainder dyes he in remainder in fee shall have wast T was said when two accidents are required to the consummation of a thing and the one happens in the time of one and the other in the time of another neither the one nor the other shall have benefit by it as the Tenant ceases for a yeare the Lord grants his seigniory and then the Tenant ceases for another yeare neither shall have a Cessavit which was agreed So Lacies Case Trin. 25. of the Queene who gave a mortall wound upon the sea of which the party dyed upon the Land yet he was discharged because the stroake was upon the Sea the death upon the Land so that neither the Admirall nor a Jury can inquire of it and t was said when diverse accidents are required to the consummation of a thing the Law more respects the Originall cause then any other A man presents to a Church in time of Warre notwithstanding the party be instituted and inducted Tempore pacis all is voyd So the Law more respects the death of him in the remainder the Originall cause of wardship then the death of Tenant for life which is but Causa sine qua non and rather a removing of an impediment then a cause so t was resolved that neyther the one nor the other shall have the ward Resolved that Sir Ra. should not have the third part of the Land by 32. 34. H. 8. for though R. the Grandfather had limitted the use to the Father which is within the Statute yet when R. the Father dyes in the life of the Grandfather the Statute extends no further for the Heire of the Father who is in by discent shall be in ward by the common Law not by the Statute and if the Statute should extend to the Son and Heire of him in remainder by the same reason it should extend to all the Heires of him in remainder In infinitum THE THIRD BOOK The Marques of Winchesters Case 25. of the Queene fo 1. LIonell Norris and Anne Mills were seised of the Mannor of M. and to the heires of the body of L. a common Recovery is had against L. without naming Anne H. Norris being in remainder in taile is executed for Treason and 't is enacted that he shall forfeit Mannors c. uses possessions offices rights conditions and all other hereditaments L. dyed without issue Anne dyed the Queene brought error against the Marques of Winchester heire of the survivor of the recoverors the error was that the originall Writt of entry wants the defendant pleaded that 14. of the Queene shee gave and restored to the Lord Norris Sonne and heire of H. Norris
be divided For he had not the Mannor of H. for his Wife had it joyntly with him See many excellent Cases in the Booke at large adjudged upon this word Having in the Statutes the Initium of a Will ought to be full and perfect which is the writing and therefore if the devisor command one to write his Will and he devises white Acre to A. and his Heires and black Acre to B. and his Heires and dyes before the devise to B. is written yet the devise to A. is good But if he devises to A. c. upon condition and he writes the devise and the Testator dyes before the Writing of the condition t is voyd for in the one case the devises are severall and the one is perfect in the other Case t is maimed and imperfect for the intire devise was not fully put in writing so t was resolved in the Case at Barre that neither the commencement nor the end of the Will was full or perfect for at the time of writing of it and at the death of the devisor he had no power in respect of the joynt estate in H. to dispose all the Mannor of T. which amounts to the value of two parts of all Also upon the first Branch he ought to have a sole estate and here his Wife is joyntly seised with him and shee cannot disagree during coverture The Statute gives liberty to him for to devise two parts by will but this is to be intended of such Land which he might convey by act executed but here by reason of the undivided estate of the Wife he cannot dispose it but during coverture Also the third part of cleere yearly value is saved to the King and the intent of the Statute was that the King shall have the equall benefit at least for his third part as the devisee hath for two parts but here the devisee had two parts absolutely and the King but a possibility Viz. If the Wife would disagree which is at her pleasure and this Statute hath been constru'd that equality should be observed A man which held three Mannors of three Lords could not devise two of them but two parts of every one upon these words Cleere yearly value 't was said that of Inheritances which are not of any yearly value some are devisable some not as Bona et catalla felonum fugit or utlagat Fines amerciaments within such a Mannor or Towne these cannot be devised nor left to discend but a Leete Waife or Stray or other hereditament appendant or appurtenant to a Mannor passe by devise of the Mannor with th' appurtenances as incidents and the Statute had no intent for to dismember these things which by lawfull prescription had beene united But if a hundred with goods of Fellons Outlaws Fines Amerciaments returne of Writts and such other casuall hereditaments within the same hundred have beene accustomably demised for a yearely rent they may be devised within the purview of the said Act. 'T was said upon the words of the Statute which says that he may devise a rent common c. Out of two parts that a devise of a rent of the full value out of all is voyd but out of two parts 't is good And 't was observed that upon 32. H. 8. a devile of all his land had beene good for two parts as adjudged in Vntons Case for Land is severable but a rent is a thing intire and 34. H. 8. onely gives authority for to devise it The second branch which speakes of division cannot be satisfied for during his life he himselfe could not Set it out and after his death it survives to the Wife The third and fourth branch is not satisfied in this word immediatly for till disagreement without question the Mannor of H. survived to the Wife and if an Office had beene found before disagreement without doubt the Queene should have a third part of the Mannor of T. and the devise being voyd at the death of the devisor the third part lawfully vested in the Heire by discent it cannot be made good and devested by a subsequent disagreement Littleton discent to the Heire of Tenant by the courtesy of a disseissoresse doth not take away entry for the Heire comes not in immediatly 't was agreed if a man devises two acres holden by Knights service and a reversion upon a Lease for life discends to the heire this is no immediate discent within the Statute but the third part of the two ought to discend see many excellent Cases of devises adjudged upon the Statute Another good Case of relations Jennings and Braggs Case a disseisee makes an Indenture purporting a Lease for yeares and delivers it to a stranger out of the Land as an Escroule and commands him for to enter and deliver this as his deed to the Lessee who doth it and adjudged a good Lease and this diversity agreed First When the person at the first delivery hath not ability to make the contract and before the second delivery hath 't is voyd as an Infant and a Fème covert otherwise when at first delivery the person hath ability but cannot perfect it till an impediment removed which is done before the second delivery there 't is good as at Barre Resolved secondly that to some intent the second delivery shall have relation to the former by fiction of Law Vt res magis valeat quam pereat as if a Feme sole deliver a Lease as an escroule and after takes Husband or dyes yet by the second delivery 't is a good deed Ab initio and to some intent Vt res magis valeat c. it shall not relate yet in truth the second delivery hath all its force by the first and is but an execution and consummation of the former as at Barre for if it should relate to the first delivery then it would avoyd the lease for it should be made by one who was out of possession fictio legis inique operatur alicui damnum vel injuriam Thirdly 't was resolved that as to collaterall acts that there shall be no relation Omninò as if the Obligee release before the second delivery such release is voyd Ratcliffes case 34. of the Queene fo 37. A. Feme sole devises Socage land to the sonne of her daughter in taile the remainder to two Sisters of the devisee and to the heires of their two bodies by equall portions to be divided the remainder in fee to the Mother of the daughters and dyes the sonne dyes without issue Martha one of the daughters dwelling in her Mothers house daughter of the devisor within the age of 16. and above 14. departed at the second houre in the night with the consent of the husband of her Mother in whose house she was 8. miles and there married E. R. the issue was whether E.R. the Mother had the custody of the said M. at the time of the contract and marriage aforesaid for if she had then the
House and Tenant at will of Land and Tenant by coppy of other Land within the Mannor of S. to Fermor leased all for life to I. S. and also seised of other Land there in Fee levyed a fine with Proclamations of all Messuages and Lands which comprehends all those leases and also his inheritance by covin to dissinherit his lessor and after the fine alwayes continues in possession and payes the severall rents to F. The lessee for life dyes the yeares expire S. claimes the inheritance Resolved that the Lord of the Mannor was not barred by the said fine 1. The makers of the Statute of 4. H. 7. never intended that a fine levyed by Tenant at will yeares or Coppy which pretend no Inheritance nor title to it but intend the disherison of the Lord c. should barre them of their inheritance and where the Statute sayth That Fines ought to be of greatest strength to avoyd strife and debate This Feoffement and fine by the Lessee shall be the cause of strife where none was before 2. The Statute doth not intend that those who of themselves without such fraud could not levy a fine to barre those which had the freehold and inheritance should be inabled to levy a fine by making of an estate to another by practise and fraud 3. If doubt be conceived upon an act of Parliament 't is to be construed by the reason of the common Law and that so abhorres fraud and covin that all acts as well judiciall as others and which of themselves are lawfull and just yet being mixt with fraud and deceit are tortious and illegall If a Woman intituled to have Dower which is favoured in Law by covin causes a stranger to disseise the terretenant to the intent to bring Dower against him and recovers accordingly 't is all voyd So if a Feme covert or Infant much favoured in Law of covin causes another to disseise the discontinuee and infeoffe them they are not remitted Sale in Market overt shall not binde if the Vendee had notice that the property was to another or if the Sale be by covin the Law hath ordained the common Bench as a Market overt for assurance of Land by fine for it sayth Finis finem litibus imponit yet covin shall avoyd them A Vacat was made in Banco of a recovery had by covin 33 34. of the Queene adjudged where Tenant for life levyed a fine with Proclamations and five yeares passed and he dyed that the Lessor shall have five yeares after his death for though the Statute saves the right which First shall grow and the right first accrued to the Lessor by the forfeiture yet because the Lessor by covin of the Lessee might be barred for he expected not to enter till after the death of the Lessee 't is no barre and namely when the Lessee hath Land of Inheritance in the same Towne as in this case so 't was agreed in the same case if the Feoffee of the Lessee for life hath Lands in the same Towne and levys a fine c. the Lessor shall have five yeares after the death of the Lessee for he knew not of what land the fine was levyed not being party to the Indenture or agreement c. So the Judges have construed the act against the Letter for Salvation of the Inheritance of him in reversion And 't was said if the Feoffee of a Lessee for yeares who made a feoffement by practise hath Land in the same Ville and levy a fine and the Lessee payes the rent to the Lessor it shall not binde and in the principall case the payment of the rent after the fine makes the fraud apparant for by this the Lessor was secure and not cause of any doubt of fraud But 't was resolved if the Bargainee or Feoffee of A. perceiving that C. hath right levies a fine or takes a fine of a Stranger to the intent to barre C. this fine levyed by consent shall binde for nothing was done in this that was not lawfull and the intent of the act was to avoyd strife So if A. pretending title disseise B. and to the intent to barre the disseissee levies a fine for the desseisor Venit tanquam in arena and 't is not possible but the disseisee had knowledge of it and if he doth not enter 't is his folly But in the case at barre every one will presume that the fine is levyed of his owne Land because that he might lawfully doe and though this conteines more acres then his owne Land this is usuall almost in all fines and the covin of the Lessee is the cause of non-claime of the Lessor and a man shall not take advantage of his owne covin and here the fraud is the more odious because of the great trust viz. Fealty To the objection that it should be mischievous to avoyd fines upon such nude averments 't was answered that it should be a greater mischiefe principally if fines levyed by such covin should binde And an averrment of fraud may be taken by the Statute of 27. of the Queene against a fine leavyed to secret uses by fraud for to deceive Purchasors So by the Statute of 13. of the Queene an averrment may be taken against a fine levyed upon an usurious contract Twynes Case 44. Eliz in Cam. Stel. fo 80. IN an Information per Cooke Atturney Generall against Twyne of Hampshire for contriving and publishing of a fraudulent Deed made of goods The case upon the Statute 13. Eliz. ca. 5. was thus Pierce was indebted unto Twyne in 400. l. and to one C. in 200. l. C. brought an action of Debt against Pierce and hanging the Writ Pierce being possessed of goods and Chattells to the value of 300. l. in secret made a deed of all his goods and Chattells to Twyne in satisfaction of his Debt yet Pierce continued in possession of the same some of them he sold and his Sheepe he marked with his owne marke after C. had judgement a Fier fac to the Sheriff by vertue thereof Bayliffs came to make execution of the goods and divers persons by the commandement of Twyne with force resisted them claiming them to be the goods of Twyne by vertue of the same deed and whether this deed was fraudulent or no was the Question and 't was resolved by Sir Thomas Egerton Keeper of the Great Seale of England and by the chiefe Justices Popham and Anderson and all the Court of Star-chamber that this deed was fraudulent and within the Statute of 13. El. And in this Case divers things were resolved First That this Deed had the markes of fraud it was generall and without exception of his apparell or any thing of necessitie for dolosus versatur in generalibus Secondly The Donor continueth in the possession Thirdly It was made in secret Et dona clandestina semper sunt suspiciosa Fourthly it was made hanging the Writ Fifthly there was trust betweene the parties for
binde the lessor otherwise of admittances upon surrenders or descents for he was tenant at sufferance who hath no lawfull interest and a Writ of entry ad terminum qui praeteriit lyes against him and so he is a deforceor Murrell and Smiths case 33. and 34. of the Queene fo 24. THe Queene grants a Copyhold in fee and after grants the inheritance of the Copyhold to a stranger the Copyholder devises to M. and after surrenders to the use of his will Resolved that custome hath so established the estate of a Copyholder that by severance of the inheritance of the Copyhold from the Mannor the Copyhold is not destroyed for being the Lord himselfe could not ouste the Copiholder no more can another claiming in by him Objected that every Copyhold ought to be parcell of the Mannor and to be demised or demisable time out of memory Resolved that because once this had both the incidents aforesaid and its perfection the severance made by the Lord shall not destroy it Resolved that notwithstanding the surrender and devise the Copyhold descended to the heire for after the severance of the inheritance from the Mannor the surrender was utterly voyd for the land was not parcell of the Mannor at the time and the devise onely cannot transferre such a customary estate but it ought to be by surrender into the hands of the Lord c. Resolved that after severance the Copyholder shall pay his rent to the Feoffee and shall pay and do other services which are due without admittance or holding of a Court as to plough the demeanes of the Lord Heriot c. but suite of Court and Fine upon alienation or admittance are gone for now the land cannot be aliened for though the Copyholder hath some benefit by the severance as appeares before so he hath great prejudice for now he cannot surrender or alien his estate nor the Feoffee cannot make an admittance for he is not dominus pro tempore Resolved that such forfeitures remaine as were before the severance as Feoffement lease wast denier of rent So if the land were of the nature of Borough English or Gavelkind and other customes which run with the land remaine And 't was said that such Copyholder hath no other meanes to alien but by Decree in Chancery against him and his heires but by this the interest of the land is not bound but the person onely Kite and Queintons case 31. of the Queene fo 25. COpyholder in fee surrenders out of Court by the custome to the hands of certaine Copyhold tenants to the use of another and his heires upon certaine condition at the next Court the surrender was presented but the condition omitted he to whose use c. dyes the Lord admits his heire he that made the surrender releases to the heire being in possession and after enters Resolved that the presentment of the surrender was voyde for that the condition was omitted for the surrender that the Copiholder made was not presented but if the surrender the condition had been presented and the Steward in entring of it omits the condition upon sufficient proofe of it the surrender shall not be avoyded but the roll amended for the roll doth not conclude the party for to plead or give in evidence the truth of the matter Resolved if a Copyholder be ousted by wrong a release by him to the disseisor doth not transferre his right because he hath not any customary estate upon which the release of the customary right may inure and this should be prejudiciall to the Lord for by this he shall lose his Fine and services but a release made to him which is admitted by the Lord and in possession is good and a release of a customary right may inure to him and the Lord not prejudiced and the release shall inure by way of extinguishment And Littleton speaks of an alienation by surrender onely which ought to be into the hands of the Lord but a release cannot be done to the Lord and Littleton says He which claimes a Copihold by surrender hath no other evidence but he which claimes an extinguishment of a right may have it by release by Deed and 't is no perill to purchasors for if the Copiholder in possession sels it he will shew the release and he which is out of possession cannot sell till he hath regained the possession caveat emptor By Wray if he which hath a pretensed title c. to a Copihold bargaines c. this is within 32. H. 8. for the Statute says any right or title and great part of the land within the Realme is in Copy and therefore the intention was to include them to avoyde maintenance and champerty Melwich and Luters case 30. of the Queene fo 26. REsolved that the lessee of a copiholder for a yeare shall maintaine an Ej ' Firmae for his terme being warranted by Law by force of the generall custome of the Realme 't is reason that he should have remedy by Ej ' Firmae And this is a speedy course against a Stranger Resolved that the Copiholds are not destroyed by severance of the inheritance of them from the Mannor but remaine in force So Murrels case before adjudged Resolved that when the Lord of a Mannor having many ancient Copiholds in a Towne grants the inheritance of all the Copiholds the grantee may hold a Court for the customary tenants and accept surrenders and make admittances and grants for every Mannor which consists of Freeholders and Copiholders comprehends in effect two severall Courts the one the Court Baron for Freeholders and in this the Suitors viz. the Freeholders are Judges and the other Court for the Copiholders and in this the Steward or the Lord himselfe is Judge and though this is not a Mannor in Law because it wants Freeholders yet the grantee may hold such Court as aforesaid for Copiholders onely as the grantor himselfe might So if all the Freeholds escheate or the Lord releases the tenure and services yet he may hold a customary Court for the Copiholds Note Reader though the Lord by his own act cannot make of one and the same Mannor at common Law divers severall Mannors consisting of Demeanes and Freeholders yet he may make a customary Mannor of Copiholders Resolved that the Lord himselfe may make a grant or admittance of a Copiholder out of the Mannor at what place he pleases but if the Steward at any Court holden out of the Mannor shall make grants or admittances they are voyd Neales case 37. of the Queene fo 26. ADjudged that where the Lord of a Mannor demises all his lands granted by Copy for two thousand yeares that the lessee may hold Courts for Copiholders as Melwiches case is before and 't was said so to be resolved in C. Hattons case Note Reader a good diversity where the number of the Copiholders may support the custome and a singular case of a Copiholder as in Murrels case before in which case the
is no difference in Law whither it be fixed with great Nailes or little Nailes or Screws or Irons put through the Walls for if it be fixed by any wayes or meanes to the house or Posts or Walls thereof the Lessee may not remove it but he is punishable in an action of wast For it is parcell of the house and by Lease or grant of the house in the same Mannor as Sealing or Plaistering it shall passe as parcell thereof Fulwoods Case 33. of the Queene fo 64. C. Acknowledged a recognizance of 250. li. to the Chamberlaine of London and his Successors after acknowledges a Statute of 200. li. before the Recorder of London and Major of the Staple to A. after A. sues Execution by Liberate but it doth not appeare that it was ever returned after the Successours of the Chamberlaine sue Execution by precept to the Serjeant of the Mase in nature of an Elegit and hath a moyty C. dyes his Wife recovers Dower and had this house assigned for her third part she dyes the Chamberlaine assignes to Fulwood after A. assignes also to F. after the Heire of C. demises to B. c. Resolved that the Successors of the Chamberlain-shall have this recognizance though a body solee for that the Corporation was by custome to diverse purposes for Orphanage for the recognizance was acknowledged for Orphanage money and the same custome inables the Successors to take such an Obligation c. otherwise of a Bishop Parson c. and that the Execution by the Serjeant of the Mase was good notwithstanding the Statute of W. 2. ca ' 18. which saith Vic' liberet ei medietatem c. By reasonable extent to wit by inquisition of honest men and the Sheriffe is sworne and the Serjeant is not sworne to take the Jury c. For the Statute extends to every other immediate officer to any Court of the King of record c. Resolved that execution of the Elegit was good enough without suing a Scire facias against A. being in by matter of Record bu 't was said if the Sheriffe had returned the former execution he ought to have a Scire facias by the Court if the Sheriffe makes execution 't is good Resolved that the Verdict was good which finds that C. acknowledged a recognizance before the Maior though not said secundum formam Statuti nor per scriptum suum obligatorium for being the trover of lay People it shall be intended according to the Statute Resolved that the Conusee cannot have aide of the Statute of 32. H. 8. ca ' 5. for which see the Booke at large Resolved that if a man be bound in two Statutes and the latter Statute be first extended and delivered in execution for a longer time and a greater sum then the first was yet when the first Statute is satisfied and his interest lawfully determined the second Conusee shall have the Land againe by force of the first extent It was resolved Per tot Cur. that the execution of a liberate is good although the Writ be not returned and so of a Capias ad satisfaciendum and an Habere fac ' sec ' seisinam and other writs of execution And that the Conusee shall hold the Land not onely untill he be satisfied for damages for detayning of the Debt and costs of Suite but also for his reasonable Labours and expences looke the words of the execution and being in by matter of record the conusor must bring his Scir fac but in Case of an elegit the Conusor after satisfaction may enter for there is no costs and damages but the meere Debt Hyndes Case in com Banco 33. Eliz. fo 70. WIlliam Hawe seised of certaine Lands by deed indented demised the same to Robert Gerrard for 16. yeares who assigned over to Elizabeth Hynd William Hawe afterwards by bargaine and sale in consideration of money due sould the reversion to one Libb and before the same was inrolled the said William Hawe leavyed a fine to Libb and his Heires c. and after the leavying of the fine the said Indenture of bargaine and sale was inroled within six Moneths according to the forme of the Statute and Elizabeth Hynd the Tenant did not atturne The question was Whither the Conusee of the fine after the said Indenture inrolled Shall be in by the fine and by the bargaine and sale for if he shall be adjudged to be in by the fine no action of wast lyeth for default of atturnement and if he shall be in by the Indenture inrolled then there needeth no atturnment And it was resolved Per tot Cur. that when Hawe by deed indented did bargaine and sell the reversion to Libb and his Heires and before the inrollment leavyed a fine to Libb and his Heires and after the Deed is inrolled within six moneths that the Conusee shall be in by the Fine and not by the Deed inrolled for the Fee simple passeth by the fine to the Conusee and his heires and after the inrollment of the deed may not divest and turne the estate out of himselfe which was absolutely established in him by the fine for when the common Law and the Statute Law concurre the common Law shall be preferred And it is true that the inrollment shall have relation to the delivery of the Deed. But that is onely to avoyd estates or charges made of the same thing by the bargainor to strangers after the delivery of the Deed and before the inrollment but not to divest any estate lawfully setled in the interim in the bargainee The Records are so high and sacred that they import in themselves inviolable verity which if any man dare to gainsay the Law doth attribute so great honor to them that they shal be tryedonely by themselves and not by the Countrey and if averrement against a Record should be permitted then the effect and validity of the record should be tryed by the Country which is against the rule of the Law Nullum iniquum est in jure presumendum Yet resolved in this Case that the Lessee shall be admitted to averre that the Deed was inrolled after the Fine and not before because it stands with the Record and doth not impugne any thing within the Record and great inconvenience would follow if such averrement should not be admitted Boroughes Case 38. Eliz. In Banco Regis fo 72. REsolved that the rent reserved upon a demise ought to be demanded if the Lessee will take advantage of a condition for non payment of the same and the demand to be made at the place limitted for the payment of the rent although there be no words of demand in the demise and although it be out of the Land demised but in the Kings Case it is otherwise Prerogativa Regis for there the rent upon a reentry reserved ought to be tendered and in such Case the Pattentee of the King shall demand the rent upon the Land Resolved if the Queene leases rendering
rent without limitting any place or to whose hands the Lessee may pay it at the Exchequer or to the Bayliffes or Receivers of the Queene and when shee so appoints it by expresse words 't is no more then the Law appointed and though the words be Ad receptum scacc ' apud Westm it needs not that the receite be holden at Westminster the Law would have implied that And when a common person appoints no place the Law appoynts the payment upon the Land Palmers Case 39. Eliz. in Banco regis fo 74. THe Sheriff by vertue of a Fier Faci may sell a Lease of the Defendant and in his Writing the true commencement and terme of the Lease must be expressed or else if he selleth all the interest that the defendant hath in the Lands he needeth not to make any mention in the returne but generally Quod fieri fecit de bonis catallis c. But an inquisition found that the Debtor of the King was possessed Pro termino quorundam annorum c. 't was void for a terme cannot be extended without shewing the certainty of the commencement for after the Debt satisfied he is to have the remainder Resolved for that the case at Barre was an execution by Elegit which ought to be made by inquisition the sale here was voyd for the terme was mistaken in the inquisition and so mistaken was apprised by the inquisition and the Sheriffe cannot sell any terme but that onely which was apprised by the Jurors Hollands Case 39. of the Queene fo 75. REsolved that before 21. H. 8. ca ' 13. if he which had a benefice with cure accept another with cure the first is void but this was no avoydance by the common Law but by constitution of the Pope of which the Patron might take notice if he would and present without deprivation but because the avoydance accrued by the Ecclessiasticall Law no Lapse incurred without notice as upon a deprivation or resignation so that the Church was voyd for the benefit of the Patron not for his disadvantage But now if the first benefice be of the value of 8. l. per annum the Patron at his perill ought to present for to an avoydance by Parliament every one is party but if not of 8. l. 't is voyd by the ecclesiasticall Law of which he needs not take notice Resolved that 21. H. 8. is such a generall Act of which the Judges Ex officio though it be not pleaded ought to take notice See the Booke at large upon this Learning what act shall be said a generall act Of which the Judges are bound to take notice what not The Case of Corporations 40. and 41. of the Queene fo 77. REsolved that where diverse Citties c. are incorporated by the name of Mayor and communalty Mayor and Burgesses c. and in the Charters 't is prescribed that the Mayors Bayliffs c. should be chosen by communalty and Burgesses c. which is as much as to say as by all the Burgesses or all the communalty that yet the ancient and usuall Election by a certaine selected number of the principall of the communalty c. Commonly call'd the Common-Councell and not by all of the communalty or so many of them as will come to the Election was good in Law and warranted by their Charter for in every Charter they have power given to them to make Lawes Ordinances and constitutions for the better government and ordering of their Citties and Boroughes by force of which and to avoyd popular confusion they by their common assent have instituted c. that the election shall be by such a select number And though this ordinance cannot be now shewne yet it shall be presumed that such ordinance and constitution was made at first Digbyes Case 41. Eliz. fo 78. IT was adjudged that when a man hath a benefice with cure above 8. l. and afterwards taketh another with cure and is presented and instituted and before induction procure the Letters of dispensation that this dispensation commeth too late for by the institution Ecclia plena consulta existit against all persons but the King for every rectory consisteth upon spirituallty and temporallty And as to the spiritualty Viz. Cura animarum hee is compleat Parson by the institution for when the Bishop upon examination had admitteth him able then he doth institute him and saith Jnstituo te ad tale beneficium habere curam animarum of such a Parish accipe curam tuam c. Vide 33. H. 6.13 But touching the temporallties as the Glebe Lands c. hee hath no freehold in them untill induction for by the generall councell of Lateran Anno. Dom. 1215. it appeareth that by the acceptance of two benefices the first is voyd Aperto jure for upon this Councell are our Bookes in this case founded And 't was resolved that this was an acceptance of a benefice Cum cura within the Statute of 21. H. 8. Institution is an acceptance by our Law and 't was lately adjudged that if before induction the Clerke be inducted to another the first is void by 21. H. 8. which saith Accept and take another and for that now the avoidance is declared by 21. H. 8 he is bound to take notice but till after induction c. Nokes case 41. Eliz. fo 80. A Man maketh a Lease by these words Viz. Demise c. Grant c. and Covenants that the Lessee shall injoy without eviction by the Lessor or any claiming under him and was bound to performe all covenants c. the Lessee assignes his terme a stranger enters upon the Assignee and recovers in an Ej firmae after ouster the first Lessee brings Debt This is a covenant in Law and the assignee shall have a writ of covenant 9. Eliz. 257. Dyer And if a man be bound by obligation to performe all covenants grants c. This doth extend as well to covenants in Law as to Covenants in Fact Resolved though the recovery were by verdict yet he ought to shew that the Plaintiffe in this recovery had an elder Title for otherwise the Covenant in Law is not broken It was holden that an expresse Covenant doth qualify the generallity of the Covenant in Law and restraineth that by the mutuall consent of both parties but a warranty in Law and an expresse warranty the party may choose whither he will have for this word Dedi importeth a warranty Sir Andrew Corbets Case 41. and 42 of the Queen fo 81. A Devises Land to B. c. to have c. till 800. l. shall be paid by them of the profits to marry his Daughters and dyes the Heire conceales the Will takes all the profits and dyes the will is found by office the Devisee enters and hath leavyed 640. l. and imployes it accordingly whither the profits taken by the Heire shall be parcell of the 800. l. was the Question Resolved that the words shall be leavyed shall be
construed shall or might be leavyed and so 't was holden of a Lease or limittation of a use otherwise he which is to leavy the Summe by deferring to doe it may exclude the reversioner for ever see the Booke at large Resolved when the heire or reversioner c. enters and expulses him to whom the Land is limitted he hath election to recover the Mesne profits in an action or reentry and retainer till he leavyes the inteir Summe and the other shall not have advantage of his owne wrong and if a stranger had entered and occupied the Devisee ought to have taken notice at his perill for Vigilantibus non c. and none is bound to give notice but here the Heire himselfe concealed the will and the Devisee had no remedy for the Mesne profits after the death of the heire Resolved that a Gardian shall not ouste Tenant for life nor yeares of the Tenement Resolved that admitting the Gardian shall ouste Tenant for yeares yet he shall not hold over because his terme is certaine in the commencement continuance and end otherwise of Tenant by Elegit Statute c. they shall hold over because the terme is uncertaine Southcots Case 43. Eliz. in banco regis fo 83. IF A. doe deliver goods to B. for to keepe the goods be purloyned away yet B. shall be charged in a Writ of detinue For to keepe and to keepe safely is all one but if B. doe take them to keepe as his owne goods he shall not be charged with them And if A. doe pledge or Guage goods unto B. in this Case B. shall not answer for them if they be purloyned for he had some property in them and not a custody onely but a ferryman a common Inkeeper or a Carrier which taketh hyre they ought to keepe the goods safely and they shall not be discharged if they be stollen or purloyned But a Factor or a Servant although he have wages doing his indeavour shall not be charged Luttreles Case 43. Eliz. in banco regis fo 86. IF a man have estovers eyther by grant or prescription to his house although he alter the Rooms and Chambers in his House it seemeth that the alteration of the qualities so as it be not of the house it selfe and without making new Chimnyes by which no prejudice accrewes to the owners of the Wood is not any destruction of the prescription and though he make new Chimnyes or make a new addition to his old house he shall not loose his prescription thereby but he may imploy or spend any of his new estovers in the Chimnyes or in that part newly added It was also resolved that if a House or Milne doe fal or be taken downe by the act of the owner or by wrong of another yet for that the perdurable part which includes all doth remaine which is the Land whereupon the Fabrick is built he may reedifie the same againe without any Losse of his apendant or apurtenant but it ought to be upon the same place which was the Foundation of the old House for as it did support and in judgement of Law included the ancient house when it was standing so it supports and includes the new house so as it is in a manner a continuance of the ancient house Diverse Tenants doe hold of another as of his Mannor by fealty and suite to the Lords Milne the Lord doth alien his Milne with the suite of his Tenants and after the vendor dyeth and his Sonne entereth and buildeth a new Milne upon the other part of his demeane he shall have the suite to his owne Milne which the Vendee had before for the suite belongeth to him that hath the Mannor for no man may have suite to his milne by reason of a Tenure If it be not of Corne growing upon the Lands within the Seigniory or Mannor and the Lord may erect a new Milne within any part of the Mannor and the Tenure is due to the same and not to any particular Milne Druries Case 43. Eliz. Error in Banco Regis fo 84. A Countesse being a Widdow retaineth three Chaplaines he who is last reteined is not capable of a dispensation for the Statue of 21. H. 8. c. 13. is executed by reteining of two and the reteining of the third shall not devest the capacity which was in the first two but if the reteiner had beene at one time he who is first promoted shall be first preferred because in Aequali jure c. 2. Resolved if the two first die the third is not capable of dispensation without a new reteiner because he was reteined at the common Law and not according to the Statute Quod ab initio non valet c. As if the Sonne and Heire of a Baron reteineth a Chaplaine and giveth him Letters under his Seale and after the Father dyeth And it was said that the said Act shall be taken strictly as if a Baron be made Gardian of the 5. parts he shall reteine no more Chaplains then before and if a Baron retaine two Chaplaines who are promoted he cannot discharge them and reteine others during their lives Slades Case 44. Eliz. fo 92. IT was resolved that every contract executory imports in it selfe an assumpsit For when one doth agree to pay money or to deliver any thing by that he doth assume and promise to pay or to deliver the things and therefore when he selleth any goods to another and agreeth to deliver them at a day to come and the other in consideration thereof agreeth to pay so much money at such a day in this case both parties may have an Action of Debt or Action upon the case upon the assumpsit for the mutuall executory agreement of both parties import in themselves as well a reciprocall Action upon the Case as an action of debt and a recovery or barr in an action of debt is a good Barre in an action upon the Case brought upon the same contract and so likewise in an Action upon the Case a recovery or Barre in the same is a good plea in an Action of Debt upon the same contract The Defendant in an Action of the Case upon the assumpsit may not wage his Law as he may doe in an action of Debt If a Summe of money be promised in Marriage to be paid at severall dayes an Action upon the assumpsit lyeth for non payment of the first although no Action of Debt lyeth untill all the dayes be past Multitudo errantium non parit errori patrocinium and if the Debtor of the King sueth by Quo minus in the Exchequor the defendant shall not have his Law for the benefit of the King Adams and Lamberts Case 44. and 45. Eliz. in banco Regis in Ejectione firmae fo 104. UPon consideration of the Statute of 1 E. 6. cap. 14. it was resolved 1. That if one demise to any of his Kindred to superstitious uses although he limit them to pay certaine Summes of
Deed to the Court the plaintiffe may pray it to be entred in haec verba the same Terme but not after Pagetts case 35. El. in communi banco fol. 76. IT was resolved that if tenant for life the remainder for life the remainder in fee if tenant for life maketh wast in trees and after he in remainder for life dye an action of wast is maintainable for the wast done in the life of him in remainder for life because it was to the disinheritance of him in remainder in fee. And now the impediment which was the meane estate for life is taken away Et remoto impedimento emergit actio It was resolved that when the trees are cut downe the property thereof belongeth to him in remainder in fee. And where it is said in some Bookes That he in remainder or reversion in fee shall not have an action of wast it is to be intended during the continuance of the meane remainder And in other Bookes is said in this case that an action of wast doth lie it is intended after the death of him in remainder for life Boothes case 36. Eliz. in communi Banco fol. 77. GEeorge Booth brought an action of wast against Skevington and declared that Sir William Booth demised for yeares to Ensor who assigned to Skevington The defendant pleaded an assignement to Elizabeth Cave before which assignement no wast was made the plaintiffe replyed and shewed the Statute 11. H. 6. ca. 5. and that the grant to Elizabeth Cave was made to the intent he should not know against whom to bring his action and averred that Skevington did take the profits the defendant rejoyned that Elizabeth Cave granted her estate to A. who demised to the defendant at will and traversed the fraud c. the plaintiffe demurred it was resolved that every assignee of every Lessee mediatly or immediatly is within the said act for the Statute was made to suppresse fraud and deceipt and therefore it should be taken most beneficially Secondly that he in remainder is within the said act as well as he in reversion Thirdly the intent of fraud aforesaid is not traversable but the taking of the profits which is a thing notorious whereof the Country may have knowledge In a formedon the tenant pleaded Non tenure the demandant said that he made a Feoffment to persons unknowne to defraud him of his tenancy and to keepe the profits the pernancy of the profits and not the Feoffment is traversable Samons case 36. Eliz. Banco Regis fol. 77. THe plaintiffe and defendant referred all controversies to the Arbitrement of J. S. who did arbitrate that the defendant shall enter into an obligation to the plaintiffe that the plaintiffe and his wife shall injoy certeine lands which he had not done this is voyde for the incerteinty of what summe the obligation shall be for the award ought to be certeine like a Judgement Also the award was voyde as to the feme for she was a stranger to the submission Grayes case 37. Eliz. Banco Regis fol. 78. Replevin THe plaintiffe intitles himselfe in barre to the avowry to Common c. which was traversed the Jury found that every c. time of minde have used to pay for the Common a henne and five egges the plaintiffe had Judgement for he needs not shew more then makes for him for this is not Modus Communiae paying so much nor parcell of the issue but a collaterall recompence to be paid for the Common for which the Terretenant had remedy but if the Terretenant had no remedy then the Commoner shall have the Common sub modo and may be disturbed by the Terretenant Fitz-Herberts case 37. Eliz. Banco Regis fol. 79. THe father tenant for life the remainder to the sonne in taile leaseth for yeares to A. to the intent to barre the sonne A. infeoffeth J. S. to whom the father releaseth with warranty and dyeth this doth not barre the sonne for although that the disseisin which is made by the feoffment precedes the warranty yet because it was to that intent the Law will adjudge upon the intire act and so a warranty by disseisin 2. Although the disseisin was made to the father yet because he consented unto it the warranty commenceth by disseisin but if the father had made a feoffment in fee and dyed this shall binde the sonne if it be with warranty Foordes case 37. Eliz. Com' Banco fol. 81. A Prebend leaseth for 70. an Patron Deane and Chapter confirme dimissionem praedictam in forma praedicta fact ' for 51. yeares non ultra this is a confirmation for all the Terme for when they confirme dimissionem c. for 51. yeares it is repugnant but if they had recited the Lease and confirmed the land for 51. yeares this had been good for they have an authority coupled with an interest otherwise if onely a bare authority but by what words soever they confirme a lease for life or a gift in taile for part this is a confirmation of all because they are intire so if the estate of the disseisor or his lessee for life be confirmed for an houre yet all is confirmed Cases of Customes Snellings case 37. Eliz. Com' Banco fol. 82. S. Brings Debt upon an Obligation against an Administrator who pleads there is a custome in L. that an Administrator shall pay debts upon contract to a Citizen as well as upon Obligation and that J. S. upon a Contract had recovered and good 1. Resol Although that debt is given against an Administrator by the Statute of 31. E. 3. yet because they were charged as Executors before so that onely the name is changed the custome generally alledged is good 2. The ordinary by taking the goods was chargeable at the Common Law 3. This custome bindeth strangers The case of Markett overt 38. Eliz. fo 83. SHopps in L. are Marketts overt for things to be sold there by the trade of the owner therefore if plate be sold there in a Scriveners shop the property is not altered otherwise if in a Goldsmiths shop if he who passeth in the street may see it Nota the reason of this case extends to all Marketts overt in England Perimans case 41. Eliz. Com. Banco fol. 84. IT is a good Custome of a mannor that all sales of lands within that mannor be presented at the Court of the Mannor Obj. What remedy if the Steward will not accept the presentment Resp What remedy if the Clerke will not Inrolle a deede of bargaine and sale and therefore Caveat Emptor 2. Obj. That Interest is by the feoffment vested in the feoffee which shall not be devested by the Custome Resp That livery was ordained to give notice and a Custome which addeth more solemnity and notice is good Sir Henry Knivets case 38. Eliz. Banco Regis fol. 85. TEnant for life the remainder in fee leaseth for yeares the Termor is ousted the disseisor leaseth for yeares his lessee sowes the land tenant for life dyes he
personam The Lord cannot claime common in his owne soyle A diversitie was taken and agreed upon between a prescription and a custome a prescription is alwayes alledged in the person and a custome ought alwayes to be alledged in the Land for every prescription ought to have by common intendment a lawful commencement but otherwise of a custome for that ought to be reasonable and ex certa causa rationabili usitata as Littleton saith But it needeth not to have intendment of a lawfull commencement as custome to have Land Devisable or of the nature of Gavelkinde or Borough English These and such like customes are reasonable but by common intendment these cannot have lawfull commencement by grant or act or agreement but onely by Parliament and the custome in the case at barre was repugnant for it was alledged that the Custome of the Towne was that every Inhabitant had used to have common within a place in the Towne of H. which was another Towne Catesbyes Case 4o. Jac. fol. 61. SIx moneths being halfe a yeare semestre is given to the Patron of an advowson to present and according to the Kalander and not after 28. dayes to a Moneth and the Statute saith Si tempus semestre non transierit adjudicentur damna ad valorem c. per dimidium anni and being ambiguous it shall be construed for the benefit of the Patron Sir Moyle Finches case 4. Jac. Com. Banco fol. 63. THe Lady M. tenant for life of the Mannor of B. the remainder in fee to the Lady Finch shee and S. her husband and D. levyed a fine to one of the demesnes who grants and renders to D. for 50. yeares the reversion to S. and his wife and her heires with proviso in the Deedes which directed the fine that the reversioner shall enter and hould Courts And it was averred that this was knowne by the name of the Mannor of B. D. maketh his sonne of three yeares of age executor and administration was committed to R. T. S. and his wife levy a fine of all the lands of the wife in K. except the Mannor of B. to the use of the feme for life the remainder to Sir M. F. R. T. demiseth to P. L. for ten yeares Dame M. dyeth P. L. entreth by vertue of a power of revocation and limitation of new uses S. with the assent of the Lady F. his wife limitteth the uses to one who ousteth P. L. and maketh a feoffment to the use of the La F. for life the remainder to H. F. in taile P. L. reenters Dame F. dyeth H. F. for rent arreare distraineth 1. Resol By the grant and render of the demesnes the Mannor is destroyed because in an instant the services and demesnes are severed by act of the party but otherwise it is if by act in Law as upon partition so it is of an advowson appendant c. and upon partition many Mannors may be made of one but not by the act of the party 2. B. is excepted by the name of a Mannor 1. Because the intent of the parties is so 2. Exception of misnosmer shall not be favoured in Law 3. It is sufficient in Law in many cases that a thing be reputed as it is named as if a remainder be limitted to a Bastard by the name of sonne of J. S. and as to that was objected that this reputation is not time out of minde this needs not if it be of convenient time as this was for it was a Mannor revera before to levy a fine and continue the name after so that this reputation is stronger having such a ground and reputation serveth in Writts amicable although not in adversarie 3. The lease made by the administrator durante minori aetate is good because the administration is generall and not speciall to the benefit of the Infant but howsoever this is good during the administration 4. P L. in the life of the Lady M. had but interesse Termini so that attornement cannot be in his life but after the death of the La. Mo. by entry of the lessee the reversion is in S. and his wife without attornement because attornement needs not because the reversion is setled and he hath no meanes to compell c. otherwise it is where an attornement may be had and although that P.L. lessee of a lessee of part cannot make an expresse attornement yet his reentry shall be an attornement in Law so he who hath interesse termini may make a surrender in Law but no expresse surrender and a man of non-sane memory may make an attornement in Law but not an expresse attornement The Lord Darcies Case 4. Jacobi Com. Banco fol. 70. TEnder is not necessary to have the single value of the heire male or female but the heire female shall not forfeit the double value because the Statute of Merton is si se mavitaverit at the age of 14. yeares c. at which time the heire female is out of Ward and where by the Statute of Westm 1. cap. 22. it is provided that the Lord shal have two yeares to make a Tender it giveth not the double value but if he waive the two yeares he shall have the value without Tender quia de mero Jure c. Burrells case 5. Jac. Com. Banco fol. 72. IF the father make a lease by fraud and dyes the sonne sells the land knowing or not knowing of it the vendee shall avoyd it 2. If the father makes a lease to the sonne who assigneth it over by fraud the father dyes the sonne sells the land the vendee shall avoyd it Sir Drue Druries case 5. Jac. Cur. Wardor fol. 73. E. 1. granted to the Towne of Y. Quod omnes de villa oriundi licet terras c. extra libertatem villae c. te nuerint in Capite se maritare possint juxta libertates villae praedictae R. D. dyed seised of a house parcell of a Monasterie dissolved in the time of H. 8. houlden in Capite the King grants the wardship of his sonne to the plaintiffe and makes the Ward Knight the plaintiffe brings a valore Maritagij The Charter doth not discharge the defendant 1. Because it is juxta libertates villae praedict ' and the liberties are not shewed 2. This Charter cannot extend to a Tenure created in the time of H. 8. 3. It is not shewed that the defendant was borne within the Towne 1. Resol If the heire in Ward be made a Knight he is out of Ward for his body because by intendment he is able to doe Knights service otherwise if made a Nobleman 2. By the death of the tenant the value of the marriage is vested in the Lord and cannot be devested by Knighthood c. 3. If he be Knighted in the life of his auncestor he shall not be in Ward at all 4. If making of the heire in ward Knight shall devest the value it will be prejudiciall to the Subject and to the King for
the prochein avoidance be within the tearme the grant is good for yeares cannot determine but the effluxion of time and the Law implyes this limitation if the Church doe come voyd during the tearme For expressio eorum quae tacite insunt nihil operatur Likewise if a lessee for yeares grant a rent charge and after surrender yet for the benefit of the grantee the tearme hath continuance although in rei veritate it is determined and the grantor himselfe shall not derogate from his owne grant to make it voyd at his pleasure The six Carpenters Case 8. Jacobi fol. 146. IT was resolved when entry authority or license is given to any by the Law and he abuse the same in this case hee shall be a trespassor ab initio But where entry authority or license is given by the party and he abuse the same there he shall be punished for this abuse but he shall not be sayd to be a trespassor ab initio and the diversity is this because the Law doth judge by the act subsequent quo animo or to what intent hee enters acta exteriora judicant interiora secreta But when the partie giveth authority c. to doe a thing he cannot for any subsequent cause punish the same 1. The Law doth give authority of entry into a common Inn Taverne c. 2. To a Lord to enter and distreine 3. To an owner of the soyle to enter and distreine dammage feasant 4. To him in reversion to view if waste be committed 5. To a commoner to enter into his Land to view his Cattell c. But if hee that enters into an Inn c. doe trespasse or take any thing away or if the Lord that distreines for rent or owner for dammage feasant labour or kill the distresse or he that enters to view wast bruse the house or stay there all night or if a commoner sell Tymber in these cases and such like the Law judgeth that hee entred for the same purpose and therefore the act that doth demonstrate this is to be a trespasse and he shall be a trespassor ab initio It was resolved that the non-seasons or not doing of a thing is not any trepasse where the Law giveth license or authority to enter viz. to deny to pay for Wine in a Taverne is not a trespasse but the Taverner may have an action of debt 12 E. 4.8 If a Taylor overvalue the making of a Garment and the necessaries thereunto he shall not have an action of debt for his owne values unlesse it be specially agreed upon before but he may detaine the Garment untill he be payd or satisfied and if the party sue for the same the Jury shall set downe the value and the Taylor shall have no more but be barred for the rest Likewise an Ostler may deteine an Horse c. Tender of sufficient amends for dammage fesant befor the distresse taken is good and the taking of a distresse afterwards is wrong tender after the taking of a distresse and before the impounding maketh the detaining wrong but not the taking but tender after the impounding commeth too late for then the cause is put to the tryall of the Law Edward Althams Case 8. Jacobi fol. 159. In dower and pleaded N. Seised in fee of Lands in W. and G. deviseth the Lands in G. to his younger Son for life it was agreed betweene the eldest Son and the Widow of T. N. that shee should release her dower in W. shee releaseth unto him omnes actiones demand c. necnon omnem dotem titulum dotis c. de aliquibus terris in W both the Sons dye shee brings dowre of the Lands in G. and judgement given for the demandant 1. Resol A release of all actions to him in the reversion barreth not dowre because shee had no cause of action against him but against the tenant of the free hold but a release of all her right to him in the reversion extinguisheth dowre for a release of right beareth actions but a release of actions barreth not a right if there be other meane to come to it otherwise not as if the disseisee release all actions to the heire of the disseisor the right is extinct otherwise it is if the release be to the disseisor and a discent after or if the release be to the lessee for life of the heire a release of all actions reall and personall is no barr in a Writ of errour but a release of a Writ of errour is a release of actions is no barr to have execution if he be not put to a Scire facias a release of a thing due before the time of payment thereof is good Quaerela is more then an action for by that the cause of action is released by release of suites executions are barred for none shall have execution without suite for it so it is of all duties but a release de quaerelis infectis in that case barreth not dowre by release of titles dowre is barred and by release of demands which is the most ample release of all 2. The collaterall agreement is not of any force or effect but generall words ought to be qualified by apt words contained in the same Deed as in this case mihi contingent per mortem dicti T. viri mei de aliquibus terris in W. c. and so extends not to any Lands in G. but restraineth the generall words to the Lands in W. onely Quando carta continet generalem clausulam posteaque descendit ad verba specialia quae clausu●ae generali sunt consentaneae interpretanda est carta secundum verba specialia As if a man grants a rent in manerio de D. precipiendum in 100. Acres parcel thereof with clause of distresse in the 100 Acres the rent shall issue out of the 100. Acres onely Arthur Blackamores Case 8. Jacobi fol. 156. THe Defendant is named Gent. in the originall Writ but by negligence of the Cursitor hee is outlawed by the name of Knight this is amendable at the common Law but in case of the King default of the Court was amendable at the Common Law as erroneous entrance of the continuance essoyne c. and any part of the Record the same Terme and therefore diverse Statutes of amendments were made one of the last whereof was 8. H. 6. cap. 12. which was more large and extends to processe and to seven other things to Records Pleas Parolls Warrants of Attorney to Writs originall and judiciall Pannels and Returnes that is where it was the misprision of the Clerke and onely the default of the Clerke by negligence is amendable but not by his nescience as if an action be brought against executors in the debet and detinet or if it be false Latine but if a word which is not Latine be written for a Latine word this is amendable as Imaginavit for Imaginatus est In a Writ of trespasse against diverse if it abate for default against one it
truth but J.H. a Commissioner for the Plaintiffe held him strictly to the Interr so as the truth could not appeare and this was holden by the Lord Chancellour and the two Chiefe Justices the Chiefe Baron and all the Court of Starre-Chamber a great Misdemeanour c. as the Statute of Exceter saith Per quod institia veritas suffocantur and Commissioners to examine ought to be indifferent and by all meanes to express the Truth And they are not bound strictly to the Letter of the Interr but to every thing also that ariseth necessarily for manifestation of the truth Also the said J. H. when he was in Examination of Peacock went forth of the place to the Plaintiffe being in another Roome and had secret conference with him And it was holden by all the Court that a Commissioner before publication of the depositions ought not to discover to any of the parties the matter thereof nor after that he beginneth to examine Interr to conferre with the parties to take new instructions to examine further then he knew before and if he did they were great misdemeanours and punishable by Fine and Imprisonment for if such things should be suffered perjury would abound I. H. was put forth of the Commission of the Peace and the Attourney generall was required to prefer an Information against him for the said misdemeanours Doctor Husseys Case 9. Jacobi fol. 71. IN Ravishment of Ward against a Feme Covert and others they were found guilty and the Baron Non culp and the Age of the Infant above sixteene and Married Foster and Warberton a Feme Covert is within the Statute because the Action lay at the common Law and the Statute gives but greater punishment and so shee is within the Statute of Merton cap. 6. De Malefactoribus in parcis of forcible entry and redesseissin Cooke and Walmsley to the contrary the Statute of Westm 2. c. 35. hath made these alterations this extends to Heires Females which the Statute of Merton did not 2. It extends to Heires Ravished after yeares of consent so doth not the Statute of Merton 3. It extends to the Clergy the Statute of M. doth not 4. M. giveth a light of Ward this giveth ravishment of Ward 5. This giveth more speedy processe and the death of the Plaintiffe or Defendant abateth not the Writ 6. It giveth greater punishment 2. A Feme Covert is not within this Statute for it is Si haeredem maritaverit satisfacere non potuerit abjuret regnum or be perpetually imprisoned and because the Law disableth the Feme to satisfy shee shall not therefore be exiled nor perpetually imprisoned and the Baron being innocent shall not be punished for the punishment is personall and he shall not have judgement at the Common Law the Action being brought upon the Statute nor judgement upon the Statute where the Action is brought at the Common Law 3. The Verdict is insufficient because no Case is within the Statute except the Ravishor marry the Infant so that if the Infant Marry himselfe or be Married by another it is out of the Statute and the Verdict found that he was Married and did not say by whom 4. Damages shall be recovered upon this Statute and where the Statute saith that he shall be banished or perpetually imprisoned the Election is in the Court Combes Case 9. Jacobi fol. 75. Vpon a speciall Verdict A Copy-holder in fee where there is no custome to that purpose maketh two his Attorneys to surrender to the use of I. N. in fee they in Court shew the Letter of Attorney and by the said Letter of Attorney surrender 1. Resolved surrender by Letter of Attorney is good for a surrender may be by the common Law without custome and may be by Attorney as incident to it If one have a bare authority coupled with a confidence he cannot doe it by Attorney as Executors cannot sell by Attorney but if he had authority to dispose as owner of the Land he may as Cestuy que use by the Statute of 1. R. 3. but if one had particular personall power to dispose as owner of the Land he cannot doe it by Attorney as if Lessee for life had power to make Leases for 21. yeares There are personall things which cannot be done by Attorney as homage Fealty beating his Villeine admittance of him to whose use the surrender is made may be by Attorney if the Lord will and yet he may upon the admittance compell the Tenant to doe fealty A fortiori here and otherwise it would be a mischiefe for it may be he is beyond the Sea or sick and cannot be present to surrender for payment of his debts or preferment of his Children but if a custome be that an Infant may make a feoffement at 15. yeares he cannot doe it by attorney 2. The Attorneys have pursued their authority although they have not done it in the name of the Authorizor for they did shew the Letter of Attorney and surrendered by authority thereof which is all one but if it be to make a Lease by Indenture this shall be in the name of him who gave the authority but Executors must sell Land in their owne name for necessity and yet the Vendee is in by the Devisor Henry Peytoes Case 9. Jacobi Com. banco IT was resolved Per tot curiam that accord in all Actions wherein is supposed the Tort to be made Vi armis where cap. and the exigent lyeth at the Common Law is a good plea as in Trespasse and Ejectione firmae detinue of Charters house or other goods for where the certainty is to be recovered an Action is a good plea when the condition in a Deede by the Originall contracts of the parties is to pay money yet by accord and agreement betweene the parties any other thing may be given in satisfaction of the money Res per pecuniam estimatur non pecuniae per rem And in this sense the saying is true Quod pecuniae obediunt omnia Every Accord ought to be plaine perfect and compleat for if diverse things are to be observed and performed by the accord the performance of part is not sufficient 17. E. 4. 2. 6. H. 7. 10. Pl. com 5. If a man be bound in an Obligation in one hundred Quarters of Wheate upon condition to pay 58. Quarters he cannot give money or other thing in satisfaction thereof because the contract Originally was not for money but for a collaterall thing Also if the things to be performed be at a day to come tender and refusall is not sufficient without actuall satisfaction and acceptance If a man be bound in a Statute Recognizance or Obligation and after a defeasance is made to pay a lesse Summe now this Summe in the defeasance is collaterall and therefore if the Obligor render the same at the day and it be refused the Obligee shall loose the same for ever as is holden in 33. H. 6. fol. 2. and yet
life his heire shall not be in ward although he be within age by that Statute because he is not immediate heire Sondayes Case 8. Jacobi fol. 127. M. S. deviseth to his Wife for life the remainder to W. S. and if he shall have issue that then his issue shall have it the remainder to S. the remainder to T. c. Totidem verbis upon condition that if any of them or this heires of their bodies goe about to alien that he in the next remainder to enter after the death of M. W. and S. T. suffereth a common recovery to his owne use in fee he in the next remainder enters 1. Resol Every one of the Sonnes hath an estate taile 1. These words if he dye without issue Male are sufficient to create an estate taile 2. The generall clause if any of his Sons or heires of his body doe it maketh it manifest 3. The condition proveth it for they cannot alien if they have but for life for this would be a forfeiture 2. The restraint of tenant in taile to suffer a common recovery is voyd See Mildmayes Case in the sixth Book Quicks Case 9. Jacobi fol. 129. THe King Lord I. N. and Tho. Q. mesnes of a Mannor which they hold in common in Capite and tenant of three Acres holden in Chivalry T. Q. maketh a feoffment of his moity to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to I. Q. his Son in taile the tenant infeoffeth I. Q. who infeoffeth T. Q. to defraud I. N. of the wardship of his Sonne within age and dyes I. N. seiseth the Son T. Q. dyeth the King shall not have wardship of the body and moity of the three Acres 1. Resol By the death of I. Q. it was a Chattell vested in I. N. and the King had but a possibility to have it if T. Q. dye during the minority of the ward which possibility shall not devest the wardship out of I. N. 2. When the tenant infeoffeth a stranger to defraud the Lord of wardship the Lord shall not have ravishment of ward before recovery of the Land in a right of ward and although the title of I. N. be but in action yet it shall not be devested by a descent after See the Statute of 34. H. 8. in Case of collusion Bewleys Case 9. Jacobi fol. 130. THe King Lord mesne by Socage and tenant the tenant is attainted of Treason the King grants to one tenendum by Chivalry and Rent and to doe his services to other Lords the tenant shall hold by Socage of the mesne and he by Socage of the King because the intent of the King was to revive the mesnalty which cannot be by any other way and the reviving of the ancient tenure shall be in construction preferred before the reservation of a new and the honour of the King shall be preferred before his profit and there was no default in the mesne Thomas Holts Case 9. Jacobi fol. 131. GRandfather tenant in Chivalry in Capite Father and Son the Grandfather conveyeth part of his Lands to the use of the Father and his Wife the remainder to the Son in taile c. the remainder to the right heires of the Grandfather and conveys other Lands to his younger Children for life with diverse remainders over and dyeth the Father tenders livery and before he sueth it dyeth 1. Resol By the death of the Father before livery sued and after tender the King loseth the primer seisin but not meane rates if any be due 2. The Son shall not pay primer seisin nor sue livery because the Father and not he was within the Statute of 32. H. 8. 3. If the King had had one primer seisin he shall not have another of the Lands conveyed to the younger Children but that ought to be an effectuall seisin Ergo here because the King had not the effect of the primer seisin of the Father he shall have primer seisin of the Lands conveyed to the younger Children as if hee had the grant of a prochein avoidance and presents and his Clerk dyeth before Induction he shall present again and before the Statute of Donis If tenant in taile the revertion to the King had aliened post prolem suscitatam with warranty which descends upon the King it is no barr without assets the effect of the warranty 4. The King shall not have primer seisin in regard of a secke revertion which descends to the Son otherwise if a rent be reserved the King may have that for a yeare So note for a fruitlesse revertion there shall be wardship but no primer seisin Matthew Menes Case 9. Jacobi fol. 133. TEnant of the King of a Messuage in Capite who holds other Gavelkinde Land deviseth all to his 4. Sons equally 1. Whether the King shall have a third part of the Messuage onely 2. Whether out of the part of the heire onely because Praerogativa Regis cap. 1. Rex habebit c. De quocunque tenuerint c. is intended if the Land descend to the same heire to whom the Land holden did discende 1. Resolved if no Will had beene made the King shall not have the Lands holden of others in socage but when by the Will to which he is inabled by the Statute he deviseth it to his Sonnes there the saving in 32. H. 8. giveth to the King ward and primer seisin So if Lands in chivalry devisable by custome are devised to the Feme although the devisee be good for all without aide of the Statute yet the King shall have a wardship of a third part 2. The King shall have his third part out of all their Estates equally Ascoughs Case 9. Jacobi fol. 134. THe King Lord Mesne in Capite and Tenant in socage the Mesne grants to the use of himselfe for life the remainder to the Tenant in taile if the remainder suspends the Mesnalty during the life of the Mesne Resolved that during his life the Mesnalty is not suspended 1. Not as to the Mesne because he remaineth Tenant to the Lord nor by reason of the remainder for the avo●ding of Fractions otherwise if the remainder be liimitted in fee for then he hath as high an estate in the Mesnalty as in the Tenancy and this can never be revived and otherwise a Seigniory in fee shall issue out of a Mesnalty for life and there will be Lord and Tenant in fee and Mesne for life but if the Lord Grant his Seigniory for yeares the remainder for life to the Tenant the Mesnalty is suspended A Mesnalty or Seigniory cannot be suspended in part and in esse for part by the Act of the party but they may by act of Law or of a third party As if the Lord take a Lease of part of the Tenancy all the Seigniory is suspended but if a Gardian indow the Feme the Seigniory is in esse for that part and suspended for the residue If two Coparceners are of a Seigniory and one commeth to the Tenancy by
them and after Judgement was given for the Plaintiffs Whistlers Case 10. Jacobi fol. 62. Vpon a speciall Verdict BEfore the Statute of Praerogativa Regis cap. 15. by the grant of the King of a Mannor all appendants without naming them passe and the Statute excepteth Knights Fees Advowsons and Indowments but all other appendants now passe without naming them and so doe Advowsons passe in case of restitution for the Statute speaketh of Grants and in Grants also without expresse mention by the words Adeo plené integré c. See other good matter there touching this Subject The Church Wardens Case of Saint Saviours in Southwark fol. 66. QUeene Elizabeth leased the rectory to the Church-Wardens of St S. for 21. yeares and after leased to them for 50. yeares in consideration of the payment of 20. l. and surrender of the Letters Patents by the Church-Wardens Modo habentes ad presens possidentes and the speciall Verdict found that they paid the 20. l. and that they delivered the Charter in Court to be cancell'd and that they paid the Fees but that no Vacat was made yet the grant is good for it appeares that the intent was not to make a surrender in deed because he saith Modo possidentes but a surrender in Law by acceptance of the second Letters Patents and although a Corporation cannot make a surrender in deed yet they may make a surrender in Law 2. Although an actuall surrender is requisit they have done all which belongs to them by delivery of the Chartar and payment of the fees and the Cancelling belongs to the Court. 3. Although it was recited that 20. l. was paid yet it needs not to be found for it is but in the personalty and is affirmed by the King to be paid and is also executed See Barwicks Case 5. Report 93. The Case of the Marshalsea 10. Jacobi fol. 68. In false Imprisonment AN Action upon the Case upon an assumpsit is brought in the Marshalsea whereas no party was of the Kings House the Plaintiffe recovered the Defendants arrested the Plaintiffe by a precept in the nature of a Capias ad satisfaciendum and he brings false Imprisonment and judgement given against the Defendants 1. Resolved the Steward and Marshall at the Common Law hath two Authorities One generall as Vicegerents of the Chiefe Justice in his absence within the Verge Another as Judges of the Marshalsea This last was limitted to Debt and Covenant where both are of the House and to trespasse Vi armis where one is but not if it concerne Land and because they have the generall authority at will and the other for life they draw many cases to the Marshalsea which ought to be in other Courts Their Jurisdiction by Fleta Lib. 2. cap. 2. Infra metas hospitij continentes 12. Leucas in circuitu And the Statute of 13. R. 2. c. 3. limits the 12. miles to be accounted about the Kings Tonnell 2. The reasons wherefore this speciall authority was given them were 1. Because the Suite there is by Bill by reason of their Priviledge which cannot be elsewhere 2. In respect of the necessity of attendance of the Kings Servants 3. If Strangers shall be suffered to sue there one Carman would sue another Carman there In aula Regis which were undecent but the generall authority vanished by the Act of 28. E. 1. c. 5. which Ordained that the Chancellour and Justices of the King should follow him therefore in Praesentia Majoris cessat c. and about 4. E. 3. the Court of K. Bench became Resident 3. The Statute of Articuli super Chartas is as much as an explanation of the great Charter and the Charter of the Forrest and not introductory of a new Law and the third Chapter of that act explaines the Jurisdiction of the Marshalsea as before and if he hold plea otherwise a prohibition lyeth and the party shall have an Action upon the Case as a consequent upon the Statute 4. That part of the Statute which giveth them Jurisdiction in trespasse shall be intended trespasse Vi armis 5. This action lyeth against the Defendants because the Court had not Jurisdiction and so have not done it by command of the Judge otherwise if the Court had Jurisdiction but proceedeth Inverso ordine or erroneously as if a Capias be awarded against an Earle c. one who is Indicted before Justices of the Peace cannot approve 1. Because he cannot assigne a Coroner 2. Because it is out of their Commission if a Court Leete be holden at another day then it ought to be the proceeding is Coram non judice otherwise it is of a Court Baron 6. R. 2. Action upon the Statute Plac. ultimo in the point that judgement in the Marshalsea when none of the parties is of the K. house may be avoided by plea without any Writ of Error which proveth that it is void Leonard Loveis Case 11. Jacobi fol. 78. In ejectione firmae for 8. acres c. L. L. seised of diverse Mannors in socage and in chivalry In Capite maketh a feoffement to diverse uses in an Indenture precedent whereby he limits to himselfe for life without impeachment of wast and to the use of his Lessees and devisees the remainder to his second Sonne in taile c. the reversion to himselfe with power of revocation after he purchaseth 8. acres in socage and revoketh as to certaine Mannors holden in socage and deviseth them and the 8. acres to his Eldest Sonne and the heires Males of his body for 500. yeares provided that if he alien otherwise then for yeares determinable upon the deaths of three persons or lesse number rendring the old rent or die without issue Male then to his second Sonne in taile with proviso to make Leases according to 32. H. 8. onely L.L. dyeth the Eldest Sonne enters into the 8. acres and dyeth leaving one Daughter who Marrieth R.D. who enters into the 8. acres c. second Sonne dyeth having L. L. who enters upon R. D. and leaseth to the Plaintiffe who enters upon whom the Defendant enters and ejecteth c. and if the entry of L L. the Lessor was congeable or not was the Question and it was adjudged that his entry was not lawfull and judgement was given against the Plaintiffe in this Case diverse points resolved some at the common Law and some upon 32 and 34. H. 8. of Wills 1. Resolv if a man seised of three acres of equall value one holden in Capite and giveth that and one of the other to his younger Sonne in taile he cannot devise any part of the third Acre because he had executed his power and if he purchase other Land in socage he can devise but two parts of that by reason of his reversion in Capite expectant upon the estate taile Object that the K. was once satisfied of the wardship by the Statute in respect of the Acre holden and the reversion thereupon shall not hinder the
nor body were lyable to Execution in Debt or damages recovered but Execution was to be done by Fieri facias or Levari facias of his Goods and Chattells and profits growing upon his Land but in debt brought against one as heire his Land was liable to Execution because the Plaintiffe had no other remedy for the goods belong to the Executors but the body goods and Lands of the K. Debtor or accomptant were ever liable to Execution but such Levari facias or Fieri facias ought to have beene sued within the yeare or otherwise he was chased to his Writ of Debt and now by Westm 2. c. 45. he may have a Scire facias and by the 18º Chapter of that Statute an Elegi● is given of the moity of the Land which was the first Act that subjected Land to Execution for Debt or Recognizance and by the Statute of 13. E. 1. de Mercatoribus 27. E. 3. c. 9. 23. H. 8. c. 6. In Statute Merchant and Statute Staple all the Lands of the Conusor at the day of acknowledgement shall be extended into whose hands soever they shall after come But in all Actions Vi armis where a Capias lyeth in Processe there after judgement a capias ad satisfaciendum lyeth the K. shall have a Capias pro fine and in such cases the Law the preserver of peace subjecteth the body to Imprisonment and by Marlebridge c. 23. West 2. c. 11. a Capias was given in an accompt the proces before being a distresse infinite and by 25. E. 3. c. 17. the same proces given in Debt as in account for before this Act the body was not liable to Execution for Debt as aforesaid 2. If Land of the heire be seised in Execution upon a recognizance of his auncestor he shall not have contribution against a purchasor of his Auncestor although he come in without consideration and although the Heire be not charged as Heire but partly as Terretenant but one purchasor shall have contribution against another purchasor and one Heire against another Heire because they are in Aequali jure and therefore the Writ here which issued against the Heires without naming the purchasor is good although he be charged as Terretenant The Heire shall have an Audita quaerela as well as the Conusor himselfe before Execution sued and a Supersedeas but a Stranger shall not If diverse acknowledge a recognizance the charge doth not survive and the Land of one shall not be put in Execution but all their Lands equally so if two are bound to warranty both or their Heires and the survivor and the Heire of the other shall be jointly vouched and the Land of both shall be rendered in value But if Baron and Feme and the Heires of the Feme are bound to warranty and the Feme dye the Land of the Baron may be solely taken in Execution because there are no Moities betweene Baron and Feme So that when Land shall be charged by any Lien the charge ought to be equall but in a Lien personall otherwise it is as if two are bound in an Obligation there the charge shall survive But a Purchasor Bona fide before any Action brought shall not be subject to any charge And three Errors were moved in the record 1. The Scire facias was Haerediterrarum c. which is improper for he is not Heire to the Land but to his auncestor 2. The Writ is Scire facias haeredi terrarum c. and the Retorne is Scire fecit W. H. militi haeredi praedicti M. and every Retorne must answer the point of the Writ 3. The judgement is generall against Sir W. H. where it ought to be speciall for otherwise his owne Land shall be liable where by the Law the Land onely which came to him by his Father ought to be charged and he is charged as Terrtenant as aforesaid but these poynts were not resolved by the Court. Nota the new Writ of Error after entry of the first was not brought Quod coram vobis residet because the Record is not removed out of the keeping of him who had the custody thereof before A Perfect Table of the Principall matters contained in every Case in this Booke WHAT words doe make a generall warranty and to whom the custody of evidences doth belong Page 1 Tenant for life commeth in as Vouchee in a common recovery it is a forfeiture Page 1 2 23. H. 8. Extends not to suppresse good uses the conveyance good and the bad use void any man may give Lands to Charitable uses Page 2 Touching the Exposition of the Kings grants and how the words Ex speciali gratia mero motu c. therein shall be construed Page 3 A common Recovery by Tenant in taile binds them in remainder and reversion and all Leases and charges granted by them ib. A feoffement by Tenant for life destroyeth a contingent remainder Page 4 Conusee of Tenant for life and him in remainder in taile renders a rent to Tenant for life it is good during his life ib. Tenant for life and he in remainder in taile infeoffe I. S. it is no discontinuance or forfeiture otherwise if without deede Page 5 Perpetuities are against Law but the Parliament or Law may make an estate as to one and good to another Page 5 6 Tenant in taile suffers a recovery and dyes before Execution it may be sued against the issu● and when a man may enter or claime the Law will not put things in him till entry or claime Page 7 A man may be in by discent and yet not have his ●…ge ib. A future power of revocation may be released Page 8 When any thing Executory is created by consent of all it may be voided Page 8 A feoffement by feoffees devesteth all future uses contingent Page 9 27. H. 8. Transferreth the possession to uses onely In esse ib. When a remainder ought to vest ib. 27. H. 8. Of uses shall not be taken by equity ib. A diversity when Tenant for life infeoffeth the reversioner mediate and when imediate there it is no forfeiture ib. A disseissor may make admittances but not voluntary grants Page 11 A difference when a confirmation is made to one that is in upon an expresse condition and when not there the estate is absolute ib. Every fee simple may be charged one way or other Page 12 A difference betweene Terminus annorum Tempus annorum Page 13 A Termor grants to B. so many yeares as shall be behind Tempore mortis suae it is void otherwise if for a certeine number of yeares ib. A lease cannot comence upon a double contingency Page 14 He who hath a power of revocation may doe it part at one time and part at another time till he hath revoked all Page 15 By the same conveyance the old uses may be revoked and new raised Page 16 Vpon what conveyances uses may be raised upon a generall consideration Page 16 17 An Action of
the King dyes the Father is King and the Son Duke by the said Statute against the rules of Law 2. The Lands cannot be so annexed to the Duchie that they cannot be severed without Statute 3. The estate is limitted to cease when the King hath no first begotten Son and to revive when he hath which cannot be without Statute 4. It should be absurd that six being then created Earles that their creation should be firme and the Creation of the Prince void 5. In the Charter there is De communi consilio Praelatorum c. and in the end Per ipsum Regem totum concilium in Parliamento such an Act as beginneth Rex Statuit and alwayes reputed for a Statute shall not be drawne in question but if it be Rex ex assensu the Commons or Lords omitting the other part it is voide 2. The said Charter having the force of a Statute is good without aid of any other Statute and although the King in his Scire facias recite another Act for th●s surplus the writ shall not abate 3. The Prince had the Dukedome in Fee for it is an inheritance because 21. E. 3. 41. the Princesse was indowed and it is no estate taile because it is not limitted of what body it shall come but onely that they shall be Heires to the black Prince 4. Against a generall Statute Nul tiel recorde shall not be pleaded for although it be lost yet the Judges ought to take notice of it and this is such an one which concernes the Prince and the Statute of confirmations doth not extend unto it 1. Because this hath a speciall relation to certeine defects as Misnosiner c. 2. Patents are made good onely against the King saving the right of others therefore the Princes right is saved In a Scire facias the King or Prince may reply but the most formall way is for the Attourney to replie as here he did No Sonne of the King but his first begotten shall be Duke of C. although he be Heire apparent to the Crowne Calyes Case 26. Eliz. Banco regis fo 32. 1. REsolved that to maintaine an action against an Inkeeper for goods lost c. it ought to be a common June 2. He ought to be a Passenger therefore a Neighbour shall not 3. An inholder shall not answer for any thing but that which is Infra hospitium therefore if a Passenger require that his Horse be put to grasse the inholder shall not answer if he be stollen otherwise if he require it not 4. There ought to be a default in the Inholder or his Servants therefore if a Guest bring one with him who stealeth the goods the Inholder shall not be charged otherwise if the Hostler appoint one with him in his Chamber who doth it But an inholder shall not be charged if he require the Guest to put his goods in a Chamber and he leaves them in the Court but it is no excuse to the Inholder that he delivered the Key of the Chamber to the Guest or that no goods were delivered to him 5. The Hostler shall answer for Charters if they be stollen but not if a Guest be beaten and all this appeares by the Writ and the words of it Paynes Case 29. Eliz. com banco fo 34. A Feme Tenant in taile taketh Baron and hath issue who is heard to cry and dyeth the Feme dyeth without issue the Husband shall be Tenant by the courtesie for although the state of the Feme be determined yet it is Tacite implied in the guift that every Husband of a Feme inheritable to the said estate shall have the Land for his life after the death of the Feme if he be intitled to be Tenant by the courtesie If a Feme be delivered of a Monster this doth not intitle the Husband to be Tenant by the curtesie otherwise it is if the issue had humane shape but is blemished if a Feme be ripped and the issue taken out of her Wombe the Baron shall not be Tenant by the curtesie otherwise it is if the issue which they had dyes and Lands discends after A man shall not be Tenant by the courtesie but where his issue may inherit as heire to the Feme therefore he shall not be of a possession in Law because there he makes title from the auncester of the Feme and not from the Feme Barretry 30. Eliz. fol. 36. A common Barretor is a common maintainer of Suites or quarrells in Courts or in the Countrey As first in disturbance of the peace Secondly in taking and keeping of possession with force or deceite Thirdly by false calumniation and sowing of Quarrells but to indite him of it it ought not to be that he hath done so twice or thrice but that he is a common doer of them Grieslies Case 30. Eliz. com banco fo 38. BY the custome one is chosen in a Leete to be Constable who refuseth and departeth out of the Court the Steward imposeth a Fine of 5. l. upon him for which the Bailiffes of the Lord distreine and he brings a replevin 1. Resolved every Judge of record may assesse a reasonable fine upon any man who makes contempt or disturbance to the Court but a Judge who is not of record cannot 2. This fine heeds not to be afferred because the Statute of Mag. Ch. speakes of Amerciaments and not of Fines for a fine is imposed by the Court and an Amerciament by the Jury therefore the Judgement in an Amerciament is generall Quod sit in misericordia and after upon estreits directed to the Coroners they are afferred and the Statute is that a Noble man shall be Amerced by his Peers which is not used at this day because it is reduced to a certeinty Viz. A Duke to 10. l. and others to 5. l. but an Amerciament of an Officer of the Court or he who hath execution of Writs shall be afferred by the Court so of any who is Judge as Suitors If a Juror appeare and is adjourned to a day of which he makes default this shall be inquired by his Companions for he shall be fined to the value of his Land per annum which the Court cannot know 3. A distresse may be taken for a fine without custome or for an Amerciament which is lesse Whittinghams Case 45. Eliz. fo 42. IT was resolved that if there be Lord and Tenant an Infant and the Infant make a feoffement in fee and execute the same by livery of seisin by his owne hands and after dye without heires in this case the Lord shall not have the benefit of the escheate and the Feoffement is unavoidable There be three manner of privities Viz. privity in blood 2. Privity in estate 3. Privity in Law Privities in blood as heires in blood privity in estate as joyntenants Baron and Feme Donor and Donee Lessor and Lessee c. privities in Law as Lord by escheate Lord of a Villaine c. If a Lessee for life
4. In this Case by grant of the reversion generally or of the Tenements the Trees passe for the inheritance of all the Land passeth and thereby the Trees annexed to it the disseisee by his entry shall have the Corne upon the ground as well as the Grasse by relation of continuance of possession but this relation is not of effect to have a trespasse against any but the first disseisor for in fictione juris semper aequitas existit and the emblements shall be recovered in damages 5. In the Case at Barr by exception of the Trees power is reserved to the lessor or his servants to enter and show the Trees to the Vendee Cuicunque aliquis quid concedit concedere videtur id c. 6. The plea in Barr is insufficient for he showeth that there was another joyntenant for life not named in the Writ and demands Judgement if action which is an unapt conclusion 2. The Plea is double one to the Writ another to the Action 3. He pleads the entry of the lessees for life which is surplusage 4. Hee averreth not that the Trees which were sold were nor Dotards which are excluded out of the exception but that they de jure pertinebant to R. L. which is not formall but upon all the matter there appeared sufficient cause to give Judgement against the Plaintiffe and therefore by the rule of the Court Quaerens nil capiat per billam The Case of the Taylors of Cloaths c. of Ipswich 12. Jacobi fol. 53. THe Taylors of I. make an Ordinance that none shall exercise the Trade in I. if he have not been an Apprentice for seven yeares and if hee doe not appeare before them to be approved upon forfeiture of five Marks and for breach of it bring debt the Defendant pleads that he was reteined by A. P. to be a domestick Servant and that he made Garments by his command 1. Resol At the Common Law none may be prohibited to exercise any Trade although he hath never been an Apprentice and be ignorant but if he misdoe any thing an action of the Case lyeth 2. This Ordinance for so much as is not prohibited by the Statute of 5. Eliz. is against Law for after seven yeares Apprentiship he may exercise his Trade without allowance of any 3. The Statute of 5. Eliz. doth not prohibite the private exercise of any Trade in a Family therefore this is out of the said Ordinance 4. The Statute of 19. H. 7. cap. 7. doth not corroborate any Ordinance against Law if it be allowed but the allowance dischargeth the penalty of 40 l. for putting in use any ordinances which are against the Prerogative of the King or the common profit of the people and Judgement was given Quod querentes nil caperent per billam Edward Savells Case 12. Jacobi fol. 55. AN Ejectione firmae lyeth not of a Close but it must be of a certaine number of Acres and the nature of them must be shewed A Writ shall not abate for want of order Viz. Of a House before Land c. and judgement was stayed Benthams Case 12. Jacobi fol. 56. IF damages or costs are omitted or not well assessed by the Jury if the Plaintiffe release them he may have his judgement and it shall not for that be reversed Insufficient assessement of damages and no assessing is all one Doctor Fosters Case concerning Recusants 12. Jacobi fol. 56. AN Information was preferred against a Recusant by an Informer Tam pro domino rege quam pro seipso before the recusant was convicted for 220. l. that is 20. l. a Moneth for a 11. Moneths absence from the Church c. And judgement given against the Defendant 1. Resolved that he may be convicted to satisfie the Statute of 23. Eliz. in this same Suite and convicted shall be taken for attainted for he shall forfeit nothing before judgement 2. The Branch of distribution in the Act of 23. Eliz. extendeth as well to the clause of penalty for recusancy as to that of hearing or saying Masses for it is all one to say shall forfeite and shall forfeite to the King 2. Diverse acts of Parliament give the penalty to the King and yet after make a distribution thereof to another who will sue as 3. H. 6. cap. 3. 3. H. 7.3 3. He against whom judgement is given upon demurrer or default or otherwise is convicted within the Statute for he is attainted which implieth it for it is so found by the Judges so by the Statute of 8. H. 6. treble damages are given where a disseisin is found to be with force this extends to a judgement by Nihil dicit or default 4. The Statute of 28. Eliz. doth not take away the Statute of 23. which giveth liberty to the informer c. for 1. It is made for more speedy execution of it 2. It doth not alter the suite of the party but of the King and leaveth the Informer as he was before 3. The Act of 28. giveth not the penalty to any new person for it was given to the K. by 23. Eliz. 4. The Statute of 28. extends onely to Indictments and toucheth not informations 5. The Defendant is not within 28. Eliz. if he be not convicted at the suite of the K. Ergo this is left as before 6. Because the Statute is in the affirmative and they may stand together but the Statute of 28. alters the Statute of 23 in this that it confineth Suites against Recusants in the K. Bench or Assizes c. which clause extends as well to the suite of the informer as of the Queene and the Statute of 35. Eliz. and 3. Jacobi inlarge the Jurisdiction as to Suites of the K. and touch not the suite of the party 5. The Statute of 35. taketh not away the Action popular given by 23. for it was made to give more speedy remedy and not to take it away a feme Covert is within the Statute of 23. and 1. Eliz. but before the Statute 35. Eliz. if a Feme Covert had been indicted of recusancy the forfeiture should not have been levyed of the goods of the Husband because he was not party thereunto otherwise in an Information or Debt brought by the informer and in that that the Statute of 35. is that the K. shall recover all the paines c. in such sort c. this alters the remedy onely as to the Queene for now shee may proceede by action as for recovery of any other Debt by the Common Law in such manner as 1. H. 7. c. 1. giveth a Formedon against Parnor of the profits c. also 35. Eliz. is in the affirmative and although it giveth the penalty of 20. l. by the Moneth yet it taketh not away 1. Eliz. which giveth 12. d. for every Sonday and Holy day and where this Statute saith that the conviction shall be in the K. B. or at the Assizes yet the Justices of Peace and others authorized by 23. may take